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An Electric Chicken Breast Dinner With the Salad Built In

An Electric Chicken Breast Dinner With the Salad Built In

New York Times14-04-2025

Wherever the cook extraordinaire Yewande Komolafe goes, I will absolutely follow — even if it's to boneless, skinless chicken breasts. Normally I'd prefer literally any other part of the bird (thigh, drumstick, wing, neck, liver, giblets, tail or feet), but I know from experience that Yewande works magic with everything she touches. And that includes the meek and mild chicken breast.
I'm thinking of her ginger chicken with crisp napa salad, where she pounds chicken breasts until thin, so they have more surface area to absorb the assertive seasoning mix of grated fresh ginger, cilantro, lime zest and a not insubstantial amount of cayenne (Yewande doesn't play when it comes to chile). After a quick sauté, she finishes her chicken with a ruffly napa cabbage salad, brightened with fresh mint and chives. Who knew white meat could party this hard?
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Now that Yewande's recipe has used half of our head of cabbage, what shall we do with the other half? Enter Ali Slagle and her bubble and squeak. A combination of bacon, leftover mashed potatoes and vegetables (usually cabbage), this traditional British recipe is named for its sizzling, popping cooking noises, as the moisture evaporates noisily from the pan. The key here is to cook the mixture until the bottom and edges get brown and crisp, adding texture to the silky vegetables. Vegetarians can omit the bacon, and anyone who loves an egg can slide a poached or fried one right on top. The runny yolk makes this classic dish even better.
Perhaps you're in the mood for a garlicky, lemony shrimp scampi? Lidey Heuck reconfigures the scampi ingredients in her 25-minute spaghetti al limone with shrimp. The surprising note here is tarragon, which gives the dish a snappy licorice freshness that's unexpected and exactly on target.
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