logo
Moroccan chicken with spiced couscous from Clodagh McKenna

Moroccan chicken with spiced couscous from Clodagh McKenna

The Guardian29-05-2025

This impressive-looking dish from Irish chef, columnist and TV presenter Clodagh McKenna is surprisingly easy to pull together, making it perfect for an indulgent midweek meal or stress-free Sunday dinner. The Tesco Finest free-range chicken – full of flavour having been raised on a diet rich in corn – is doused in a smoked paprika marinade before cooking. Then it's served simply with spiced couscous made using stock from the chicken. Everything is finished off with harissa and a deliciously cooling mint dressing made with creamy Tesco Finest Greek yoghurt.
Prep and cook 4 hrServes 4
For the chicken1 x 1.65kg Tesco Finest British cornfed free-range whole chicken 1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp ground coriander
½ tsp smoked paprika
1 lemon, zest and juice 2 tbsp Tesco Finest Sicilian extra virgin olive oil
For the chicken stock from the carcass 1 chicken carcass
1 carrot, peeled and sliced 1 stick of celery, sliced 2 Tesco Finest echalion shallots, chopped Any fresh herbs
For the couscous400g couscous
½ tsp cumin
½ tsp cinnamon
½ tsp coriander
1 x 400g can chickpeas, drained and rinsed 1 lemon, zest and juice 600ml hot chicken stock, made from the carcassHandful flat-leaf parsley, chopped
For the mint yoghurt100ml Tesco Finest Greek yoghurt
1 tbsp fresh mint, finely chopped
To serve Harissa paste
Start by making the chicken marinade. Place all the spices in a small bowl along with the lemon juice, zest and 2 tablespoons of olive oil, and whisk together. Rub the marinade all over the chicken and leave to marinate for 1 hour in a fridge.
Heat the oven to 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas 4 and roast the marinated chicken for 1½ hours. Once it's cooked, remove all the meat from the carcass, tear into pieces and place to one side.
To make the stock, put the carcass, the chopped vegetables and herbs in a large saucepan. Add enough cold water to cover everything, and season with black pepper. Bring to the boil, reduce the heat, put on a lid and allow to simmer for 1 hour. Strain through a sieve.
Pour the couscous grains into a bowl and stir in the spices, lemon juice and zest, and then add 600ml of hot chicken stock. Cover the bowl and leave for 15 minutes. Separate the grains using a fork and stir in the chickpeas and parsley. Season with sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.
In a separate bowl mix together the yoghurt and fresh mint.
To serve, pile the couscous on to a large plate, top with the torn chicken and finish with generous dollops of mint yoghurt and harissa.
Shop the ingredients for this recipe on Tesco.com and discover how Tesco Finest can make your everyday taste better

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mother relives shock of life-changing stroke just days after son was born
Mother relives shock of life-changing stroke just days after son was born

BreakingNews.ie

time12 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Mother relives shock of life-changing stroke just days after son was born

A mum has relived the shock of a life-changing stroke just days after she brought her newborn son home from hospital. Lisa Kenny, 42, was separated from her family for seven months after the crippling health emergency derailed the joy of welcoming baby Alfie in October 2019. Advertisement She now lives with aphasia, an acquired language disorder that often occurs following brain injury, such as stroke. She spoke about her experience as part of Aphasia Awareness Month. Aphasia affects the understanding of spoken or written language, including reading and writing or the production of spoken language. Mother of two Lisa Kenny, 42, pictured with baby Alfie in hospital after suffering a stroke within a week of his birth in 2019. Picture: Emma Kenny. Ms Kenny, from Balbriggan in north Dublin, said: 'With my stroke and aphasia, it was hard to suddenly be separated from my children because I couldn't talk and I was on a lot of medication. Advertisement 'When I was in hospital, it was so hard because I couldn't see my children, Emily, now 13, and Alfie.' Her first symptom of stroke, four days after returning home with Alfie, was a headache and she later lost feeling in her right arm and leg before her face began to droop. Ms Kenny's fiance, Paul, phoned for an ambulance and a brain scan revealed she had experienced a haemorrhagic stroke. She underwent brain surgery and again two months later, to replace her skull bone. Advertisement Due to complications including pneumonia and seizure, it would be seven months before Lisa she could return home from the National Rehabilitation Hospital, where she worked with occupational, physical and speech and language therapists. 'Now, I'm OK with speaking and talking, it's 50/50. I have got back to normal texting, which is huge for my communication,' she said. As a result of her aphasia, she could not return to work. Lisa uses Irish Heart Foundation supports to aid her recovery, including the Young Stroke Survivors Network, the Life after Stroke private Facebook group, the Aphasia-Friendly Cafe and the Rhythm of Recovery Choir. Advertisement 'I continue to push and challenge myself and just try to stay positive,' she said. 'I keep going, keep strong and healthy, for Emily and Alfie. 'I choose to laugh, love and be happy because life keeps going on and I will always have them with me. 'My speech and language and physiotherapy are the key, too.' Advertisement She is working with the national charity to improve her comprehension, reading and maths. Helen Gaynor, head of community support services with the charity, said: 'The Irish Heart Foundation offers a variety of support services for people living with the life changing effects of a stroke, including the challenges of aphasia. 'Our stroke connect service and peer support groups are available to anyone who has experienced a stroke, and those living with aphasia. 'Our Step by Step through Stroke booklet, a helpful guide for stroke survivors, families and carers, helps people to prepare for potential changes due to stroke, such as communication difficulties.' For more information on aphasia support, and other supports for anyone affected by heart disease or stroke, visit

Huge numbers opt out of Ireland's organ donation scheme in four days
Huge numbers opt out of Ireland's organ donation scheme in four days

Times

time17 hours ago

  • Times

Huge numbers opt out of Ireland's organ donation scheme in four days

Almost 30,000 people chose to opt out of donating their organs in the first four days of a new scheme coming into force. They added their names to the opt-out register as soon as the Human Tissue Act 2024 came into effect last Tuesday, with 29,394 listed by Friday afternoon. The new legislation means everyone in the state agrees to be a potential organ donor when they die, unless they choose to opt out instead. There are about 676 people in Ireland in need of an organ donation. If someone's organs are eligible for donation, their next of kin will first be consulted before any action is taken. If their consent is not given for the donation, it will not proceed. The national organ donation opt-out register is on the HSE website. Alan Gaffney, clinical lead for organ donation at Beaumont Hospital in Dublin, explained that only people who died in an intensive care unit on a ventilator following a brain stem or cardiac death were eligible organ donors. He said he expected the legislative change would bring about only a minimal increase in the number of donations. 'We don't expect there to be too much change within the ICU [intensive care unit] to what we normally do. The only change would be a step whereby we check the register to make sure that somebody hasn't put their name on it before we approach that family. Other than that, everything else essentially remains the same,' Gaffney said. He said the introduction of the opt-out system would not in itself lead to an increase in the availability of organs for donation. 'We don't expect it will make a difference. Spain has the highest organ donation rate in the world, [and] has been leading this for many, many years, and they are very clear about what increases organ donation rates. That is essentially having key organ donation personnel embedded in ICUs, and having an audit of all potential deaths in that ICU,' Gaffney said, adding that the national office for clinical audit was active in six hospitals across the country. The audit involves reviewing all ICU deaths to determine if somebody was an organ donor or could have been a donor. 'It's very rare to die in circumstances where you could be an organ donor. There are only around 80 deceased organ donations per year in Ireland. Because it's rare, you need to have people who are trained in the ICU to be able to detect those who could be potential organ donors,' he said. In a statement, a spokeswoman for the HSE said people could also remove themselves from the opt-out register at any time. 'The act also provides a framework for living donation and for the first time will provide a way for people who wish to donate a kidney to someone they don't personally know, the opportunity to do so [known as non-directed altruistic donation],' she said. Maureen O'Donnell, chief executive of the Irish Lung Fibrosis Association, said it was critical that the wider system of carrying out transplants was examined after the changes. 'We hope that it will result in more organs being available for transplant to patients who desperately need them. Lung fibrosis patients represent the largest pool of lung transplant candidates now that cystic fibrosis can be controlled through medication and we have many patients on the transplant list who are called into the hospital multiple times, only to return home disappointed because there wasn't a match,' she said. Colin White, national advocacy and projects manager at the Irish Kidney Association, noted that Wales introduced an opt-out system in 2015, which was then implemented by the rest of the UK. 'It hasn't been a massive game-changer in terms of the bottom line,' White said, adding that only 1 per cent of all deaths were in circumstances where organ donation was possible. 'This doesn't suddenly open up a massive pool that wasn't accessible before.'

From Cork to Maidenhead: An Irish nurse's story
From Cork to Maidenhead: An Irish nurse's story

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • BBC News

From Cork to Maidenhead: An Irish nurse's story

A nurse who moved from Ireland to Berkshire in 1948 at the age of 19 to join the newly created National Health Service (NHS) was a "pioneer", her daughter has McCarthy was one of thousands of Irish women recruited to train and work in British hospitals after the end of World War Davies said her mother, who died last year aged 95, "absolutely loved" her job as a to Radio Berkshire ahead the 77th anniversary of the NHS on 5 July, she said her mother told her it had been "very strict" in the early days. The NHS took control of 480,000 hospital beds in England and Wales in 1948 but it was short of 48,000 nurses so an active recruitment drive was launched in the time, nurse training opportunities in Ireland were limited and expensive, making the chance to train for free in British hospitals with live-in accommodation highly the 1960s there were about 30,000 Irish nurses working in the NHS. Ms Davies said her mother saw an advert and decided she wanted to first spent a year working at a hospital in Highgate, London, on an orthopaedic ward before an outbreak of tuberculosis (TB), she said."About summertime 1949, mum and her friend wanted to apply for a job in Maidenhead," she said."I think working a year on the TB ward was just getting to them, they were seeing a lot of death."Nora spoke fondly of her time in the NHS, said Ms Davies, adding that during the early years she had said it was "very strict" but there was "a lot of camaraderie too".She said her mother had told her of dances at the local church hall which the off-duty nurses would attend and where Nora met her future husband. Ms Davies' daughter Ciara has retraced Nora's journey from Cork to working at Maidenhead General Hospital in Berkshire, as part of her university said: "I started in Ireland, we went to the original green rooms in O'Donovan's where the [nursing] interviews had taken place."Then to where she caught the bus from in Cork. We saw a little bit of Maidenhead but the original building for Maidenhead General Hospital was no longer there."There were some surprises about her life that I didn't know, such as learning about tuberculosis and what her life was like on the TB ward."Nora worked as an NHS nurse for 50 years, retiring at the age of story has been featured in a book, titled Irish Nurses in the NHS - An Oral History, which explores the life experiences of the Irish migrant co-author Prof Louise Ryan said the NHS described how it was "actively recruiting" in Ireland, with advertisements in national and local papers. NHS recruiters travelled throughout the country and carried out interviews with young women in local Ryan said: "Their travel was paid, they earned a salary while they trained - plus they got accommodation in the nurses' home."If you can image parents waving their children off on this mammoth journey across the sea to England – knowing there was secure accommodation was very reassuring – they were very well looked after." You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store