Chicken Roll Roast with Chanterelles
I never wanted kids when I was younger and sometimes wonder why I ended up with 3 of them. Do not get me wrong, God knows I adore them all each in his own way and wouldn't have them any differently (or maybe just...), but on certain days I do remember why I didn't want any. And those moments long ago had been illuminated ones after all.
Pregnancy was fun and I do regret not having one of those studio shots taken during mine. Bringing up babies had been better than playing with Zapf dolls, baby clothes costing less than doll clothes, but we did end up using more than one diaper. Past age 3, they started getting difficult to be ignored and the chances of being called up to meet the school principal(s) or other person(s) of authority increased frighteningly. Mum would say that it's karma, since she has had her share of meeting persons of authority where I was concerned.
Last evening Hub was called to the Golf Club to meet its Director. I will not embarrass my teenager by telling the whole world what he has done wrong this time, but suffice to say that as usual he had not taken our advice and has therefore gotten himself into some trouble.
My blood was needless to say boiling all evening, but given a night's sleep and a morning stuffing myself with baked curry puffs, I'm feeling more philosophical about the whole thing and can now say that that's all part and parcel of growing up, that hopefully it will teach him something - if he will only but learn from it.
It was however fortunate that I had thought to get dinner out early yesterday or I would have poisoned the family in my state of mind. As it was, we had a lovely Chicken and Bacon Roll Roast with Chanterelles in Cream and White Wine Sauce. Voilà, I got it all out.
Chicken Roll Roast with Chanterelles :
800g chicken thighs and breasts (deboned, skin-on, tied into a roll)
2-3 bacon strips
fresh rosemary leaves
300g fresh chanterelles
1 large fresh porcini
1 onion (chopped)
1 garlic clove (chopped)
2 tbsp olive oil
1 tsp chicken stock granules
80ml dry white wine
salt and pepper to taste
2-3 tbsp crème fraîche
Get your butcher to prepare the chicken roll. It's usually deboned whole chicken or chicken thighs and/or breasts covered with bacon and fresh herbs and tied together with kitchen strings.
Clean and slice the mushrooms.
Using a Le Creuset or similar pot, oil the bottom and brown the roll bacon-side down. Then brown the other 3 sides.
Add more olive oil and the chopped onions and garlic. When they are fragrant, add the mushrooms. Coat them with the fragrant oil.
Sprinkle black pepper all over. Add the stock granules to the mushrooms and pour the white wine over everything. Cover the pot and cook on medium-low heat for 20-25 minutes.
Check that the meat is cooked or almost cooked. Add salt to taste and stir in the cream. Cover the pot and cook for another 10-15 minutes on low heat.
Serve hot on steamed basmati rice.
Children are a great responsibility and That is why I always have the highest respect for mums... Especially when they still have churn out great comforting dishes like these.
RépondreSupprimerThis is why I love your blog: you're not just a food blogger and I love reading the little tidbits of your life. Good writing next to pictures of delicious looking food and recipes. What could be better?
RépondreSupprimerI completely agree about parenting. My husband and I love our kids with all our hearts, yet sometimes we fantasize about life without children and what we'd be doing if it weren't for them.
I would fantasize too but I always qualify immediately the thought - because you know that we have to watch what we wish for and I really do not want anything to happen to my kids because of that.
RépondreSupprimerI am that superstitious, I'm afraid.
Hey dear
RépondreSupprimerYeah, I agree with An that your blog is really interesting because you're so open to share about your life. :)
I hope matters with your son gets cleared up? He's a teenager after all. AND a boy too.
My brothers were more "difficult" to handle than my sis and I, though I don't think my parents were ever called up to go to school or anything else - mainly because we weren't really participating in a lot of things outside school!
In my family, it was my sister and I who gave the most trouble to my parents. My brother was an angel. :-)
RépondreSupprimerLike you said, the Teenager is still young and his mental age is certainly much lower than that. Actually we already know that he will always have certain difficulties in life, so we must make room for that.