Tender, mint-infused chicken breasts with a sticky-sweet honey and soy glaze |
These are some of the ingredients I had to work with. Picture courtesy of Woolworths. |
The only tricky part about this recipe is making sure the chicken is perfectly cooked. This is not as easy as it sounds, because the one end of a bone-in chicken breast is considerably thicker than the other. How long your chicken will take to cook depends, of course, on the size of the pieces. I always cut a deep slit into the thickest part of the breast, then prise it open to check that it's cooked to the bone. Any sign of pinkness in the juices, and I put it back in the oven for another few minutes.
Finally, this year, it’s not just bloggers getting the chance to get creative in the kitchen along with MasterChef and Woolies. Create a recipe with the same ingredients used each week by the Woolworths Masterchef Competition bloggers and you could win one of fourteen R1000 Woolies gift cards, or the (very!) grand prize of a R10 000 gift card. Head over to the Woolworths Masterchef Hub for more info and T&Cs.
My first recipe for Woolies/Masterchef: Slow-Roasted Leg of Lamb with a Basil Walnut Sauce
Peppercorn Chicken with Chilli & Mint
4 large free-range chicken breasts, on the bone
flaky sea salt
20g (half a cup, closely packed) fresh mint leaves
2 fresh red chillies, deseeded and finely chopped
4 Tbsp (60 ml) olive oil
4 Tbsp (60 ml) honey
2 Tbsp (30 ml) light soy sauce
2 tsp (10 ml) rainbow peppercorns, coarsely crushed
Heat the oven to 180 ÂșC. Put the mint leaves, chillies and olive oil in the jug attachment of a stick blender and whizz to a fairly fine pesto.
Season the breasts lightly with salt. Slide your fingertips under the skin on top of the breasts, breaking the fine membrane as you go to create a pouch. Take half the mint paste and spread it evenly under the breast skin (reserve the remaining mixture). Pull the breast skin back into place.
Cut a deep horizontal slash into the fleshiest part of each breast, and rub the remaining paste into the slashes. Set aside for an hour, or until you’re ready to cook the breasts.
Place the breasts skin-side up in a roasting pan, cover them lightly with tin foil or baking paper and roast for 25-30 minutes, or until they are just cooked through. Drain any excess fat from the pan.
Warm the honey until it’s runny, then stir in the soy sauce. Drizzle this mixture all over the chicken breasts – and don’t worry if it slides off into the pan. Press the crushed peppercorns onto the skin of the breast.
Drizzle the glaze over the partly cooked breasts before returning them to the oven. |
When the skin is golden and beginning to blister, remove the chicken breasts from oven and let them rest for 5 minutes.
Cut the breasts into pieces and drizzle over any pan juices.
Serve hot, with wedges of lemon.
Serves 4.
Here is the list of ingredients I was given to work with (I was also allowed to add salt, pepper and oil to my 'mystery box'):
Chicken
Honey
Light soy sauce
Star anise
Fennel seeds
Three colour peppercorns
Cloves
Cinnamon
Coconut
Chilli
Mint
3 comments:
Interesting mystery box. Your solution looks yummy - so many spices in the list that it must have been hard to choose.
They taste Yammy!!!!
@Kit Thanks as always.
@Jon: Thanks very much! I'm glad you liked them!
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