Old memories from an old guy....
I am aware I have already shared this employment resume data with you, but here it comes again. A long-long time ago, (Key in vocals of Don McLean, singing "Bye Bye, Miss American Pie") the company I worked for did business with some good folks in Barbourville, KY. I was in their plant for a day or two every other week for three years and on my KY trips, I stayed in Corbin, which is on I-75, the Highway built specifically so folks from Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan would have a nice 4 lane to drive to Disney World.
I am sure in another post, I mentioned Agnes and Velma cooking wonderful Smashburgers for me at The Corbin Burger Barn, years before they became a popular burger cooking method on many YouTube videos. Back then, there was also a great “Mom and Pop” “Meat and Three” place in Barbourville where we enjoyed lunch each day and I discovered Hot Chicken Salad. Their version of the casserole was really tasty, and the portions were generous. How could a QC/QA guy on the road have eaten anywhere else?
Eventually We began making Hot Chicken Salad at home in an attempt to fill up two football playing sons. It was as much of a hit in Mississippi as it was in Kentucky and has remained in our once or twice a year rotation since the first time the boys, said, "Are there any seconds left?" The boys are long gone in their houses, with their own food budgets to worry about now, so a smaller size casserole is what we make these days.
Here is how we make Hot Chicken Salad at our house. The recipe has remained the same over 49 years, so there is a pretty good chance you will like it too. The version I will show here used a chicken Béchamel sauce, because we had no cream of chicken soup in the pantry, and I did not feel like driving a mile to the little grocery store. If you decide to try this, I recommend using Campbell's Cream of Chicken Soup, which produces a better Mom and Pop taste in the finished dish. It's not that I don't like a good Béchamel sauce, which is one of the Five Mother Sauces of French Cooking - "une sauce mère", just that what I made wasn't a real Béchamel, since it used chicken broth where milk is the classic liquid.
Oh well ... I do lots of things wrong and almost always know they are wrong when I do them. There is nothing better than a nice Béchamel sauce when the recipe calls for it. My excuse for making an improper sauce here is that the recipe actually calls for a can of Cream of Chicken soup.
Here is a nice dish your family should like:
Hot chicken salad
Ingredients:
2 cups boneless chicken thighs cooked then pulled apart into
fork sized pieces. You can use breast meat also. I just like thighs.
1 cup celery, diced (1/2 cup will be sauteed with onion
and the other 1/2 cup mixed in just before baking)
1/2 cup onion, diced
1
(8 oz.) can water chestnuts, Cut into slithers
1/4 cup almond
slithers
1 cup mayonnaise
1 cup "chicken broth Béchamel sauce",
or better - 1 can cream of chicken soup
1 Tablespoon lemon juice
1 Tablespoon Hidden Valley Ranch dressing mix
2 Tablespoons dried
parsley
1 Tablespoon green onion tops, sliced
Salt and black
pepper
2-3 cups Ruffles potato chips, lightly crushed, plus more if desired
Ingredients For cooked chicken thighs and chicken broth
2
pounds boneless chicken thighs, (Maybe 6 total) cooked and cut into
1-inch pieces
1/2 of a medium onion, left whole
1/2 stalk
celery, left whole
2 cups water
salt and black pepper
Ingredients For
chicken Béchamel sauce:
4
Teaspoons flour
4 teaspoons butter
1/2 teaspoon Salt
1/2
teaspoon Black Pepper
2 cups chicken broth (from cooking chicken
thighs)
note for Béchamel sauce - 1 can of Cream of Chicken Soup works better
Directions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Cook chicken thighs (or breast if desired) in water, with celery, onion, salt and black pepper. When tender, remove chicken meat and pull apart. Set aside.
Strain
onion and celery from broth and set the broth aside.
Make
Béchamel sauce by cooking flour in butter for 2 minutes, add salt
and black pepper then slowly stir in chicken broth. Reduce the liquid
until a thick gravy is formed then stir in the Hidden Valley Mix and parsley. If using
cream of chicken soup, add parsley but only add 1/2 can of water to
the soup concentrate, mix well and do not cook.
Sauté the diced celery and onion in 1 Tablespoon butter, until softened then add the water chestnuts, slithered almonds, and chicken. Mix well, remove from heat and set aside.
Place the chicken mixture, an additional 1/2 cup of diced celery, mayonnaise, green onion tops, and lemon juice in a large bowl and mix to combine well. Taste for seasoning and add salt and pepper if needed.
Transfer the chicken mixture to a 3-quart (9-by-13-inch) shallow baking dish. Spread it out evenly and top with the crushed potato chips.
Bake uncovered for 30-40 minutes, until the chips are golden brown, and the mixture is warmed through and bubbling lightly at the bottom. Serve hot.
God Bless You.
9 comments:
"Oh well ... I do lots of things wrong and almost always know they are wrong when I do them."
I read that twice, just cause. Would be a great subtitle to what us old folks call a cookbook.
I have trouble with my almond slithers, too. Darned things just won't stay on the cutting board.
All kidding aside, ain't nothing wrong with cream of chicken soup or using chicken broth to make a pseudo bechamel sauce. Just
keep doing what you do, Chef Bear. We love it.
Mr. Bear,
You and America's Test Kitchen are my "go-to" for cooking.
Can you give us the date of your column on Velma and the smashburger? I'd like to re-read it.
Thank you sir.
I love your column. As a retired professional chef and restauranteer that reads cookbooks for fun, your column ranks up there with my favorites. You bring it on home with great narratives. Your “la technique” is impressive too.
11:48 My post about Corbin and Velma was mostly just a passing comment. I might be able to find it, not too sure, but I will look.
I'll bet this would be even better with Japanese mayonnaise instead of any thin, weak-kneed American variety of mayonnaise ("blandnnaise"l.Get yourself over to the Asian market and pick up a bottle of it
I might take this to the church for Thanksgiving potluck dinner. No Kewpie mayo. It's runny. Hellmann's all the way for me.
I respect those Bear recipes that achieve high marks in both taste and nutrition. Is the featured meal a la 'Early Paula Dean'?
This one was a 1990's Mom and Pop Kentucky small town Diner look-alike dish. Not sure when Paule dean did her version or if she ever did. Maybe she dined in Corbin back then too. She could have stepped oner and said hello if she did. It certainly would be OK for Dinner on the grounds. I might wait until I placed it on the serving line before crumbling the chips over the top to keep them crunchy/
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