Channeling Bayless

March 26, 2010

I am a huge Bayless fan. But let’s put things in perspective here. Emily & Jenn are ginormous fans. If Emily isn’t waxing poetic about Smitten Kitchen, she’s doing it about Bayless. And Jenn, I mean, just look at one of her recent Bayless concoctions! The two of them even started a ‘Bayless Fest’ where they get together and cook Bayless-inspired dishes. I, regretably, am not that hardcore, although I could probably eat at Xoco every single day with no other food in the world and die a happy girl.

You wouldn’t know I wasn’t hardcore by this picture, wouldya? It’s practically like Rick and I are BFF, right? But honestly, this was taken during Xoco’s opening night, as we went following our last class in culinary school. We used that specific reason as an excuse to allow him to get his picture made with us :) . I’m sure it was one of many photos he was part of that day, but despite his possible annoyance, he smiled, introduced himself (as if that were needed), congratulated us, and was super genuine. Meanwhile, I was sweating like a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs, and trying my damndest to contain myself.

I will admit though, that I haven’t been to Topolobampo, despite trying. Maybe it isn’t as hard as getting a reservation at Schwa, but you do have to allow plenty of advance planning; one week simply will not do. And if you’re thinking going sans reservation, plan on waiting 2-3 hours. Both reasons are how we ended up at Xoco a few weeks ago and at Epic during Cheryl & Luke’s visit, not that I’m complaining or anything – both were scrumptious, just not my first choice.

And so, in light of my unsatiable Bayless hankering, I took matters into my own hands and pulled Mexican Everyday from my cookbook stash atop my refrigerator.

Mexican Everyday is a great weeknight go-to, and is loaded with quick, fairly easy recipes. This one, however, is better for a weekend, but even easier than the weeknight recipes. It’s just that you gotta break out the slow cooker for the afternoon, which is a bit difficult if you’re a full-time worker, like yours truly. But you dump the stuff in, and you move away. You come back, hours later, to an ultra-tender, perfectly balanced one pot wonder.

Chicken a la Veracruzana
Adapted from Mexican Everyday; serves 6

this is a great dish to make over the weekend because it makes the whole house smell like Bayless. as you can see, i used olives in the pictures (as per the recipe), but i should know better, since i hate them. I’d leave them out b/c it makes the dish too salty. instead, add a little extra parsley and maybe a squeeze of lime juice, if you want.

printable version

ingredients
4 medium red-skin potatoes cut into slices (~1.5 lbs)
6 whole chicken legs, skinless (I left on)
1 28-oz can whole tomatoes, fire-roasted, cut into small chunks
4-6 pickled jalapenos, cut into strips
4 garlic cloves, minced
2 T Worcestershire sauce
1/4 t dried thyme
1/8 t g cloves
1/4 t g cinnamon
salt to taste
1/4 c chopped fresh parsley + more for garnish

special equipment: slow cooker

instructions
spread potatoes over bottom of slow cooker and top with chicken.

in a medium bowl, toss together the tomatoes, jalapenos, garlic, Worcestershire, and spices. Pour oven chicken. Cover and cook on high for 6 hours; keep warm until ready to serve.

transfer chicken to platter (it will literally fall off the bone, so be careful). mix in parsley and adjust seasonings. spoon over chicken and garnish with more parsley.

Random Posts

Loading…

StumbleUponTwitterFacebookGoogle BookmarksDiggLinkedInGoogle GmailDeliciousHotmailBookmark/FavoritesShare

Tags: , , , , , ,

11 Responses to Channeling Bayless

  1. jared on March 26, 2010 at 10:45 am

    We have yet to try Xoco, maybe will do that soon. We did eat at Frontera Grill a few years back and enjoy the mole very much. Also, if you do get through the phone system to Schwa can you add +2 to your reservation. =)

    The dish looks great BTW, I can imagine the smell now. Probably a good dish to make with the cold weather we had the past few days. Also, your plate is chipped, be careful not to cut yourself on it while licking it clean.

    • chiknpastry on March 27, 2010 at 12:07 am

      Ooohhhh mole- makes me wanna go even more just hearing that word!

      And thanks for the plate warning! They clearly get plenty of use!

  2. Emily's Mom on March 28, 2010 at 8:58 am

    You are right about Emily loving Rick Bayless food!

  3. Jenn Sutherland on March 29, 2010 at 7:53 pm

    Thanks for the Bayless shout-out. Yeah – total fangirl here! Though I can’t eat at Xoco for the gluten (still blushing that RIck answered my tweet personally asking about it), and like you, haven’t planned ahead enough to eat at Topo, though it’s on the list of things to do!

    I’ve made this one too, and like you, it was a bit too salty for me, though I do love olives. It was good, but not the best of Bayless. I won’t hold it against him. ;)

    • chiknpastry on March 30, 2010 at 9:13 am

      @ emily’s mom: she definitely is pretty hardcore isn’t she?!

      @ Jenn – i’m glad i wasn’t the only one thinking the salt was way overload. i agree – not my favorite bayless recipe, but still good!

  4. Emily Phillips on March 31, 2010 at 12:24 pm

    Thank you all for having a conversation about me without me being present – ha!

    I do need to pull out the Bayless cookbooks here again – the winter months were a little quiet on the Bayless front. However, there is a trip to Topo in my near future!

  5. foodcreate on March 31, 2010 at 12:35 pm

    Interesting :) )

  6. Allison on April 5, 2010 at 3:43 pm

    I loved this post! I too am a huge Bayless fan, there’s just something about him! So jealous you got to meet him!

    • chiknpastry on April 5, 2010 at 4:27 pm

      thanks Allison! isn’t he a cutie?? :)

  7. Emily on January 29, 2011 at 12:35 pm

    Hey Heather – I’m making this today. Think it would hold up to bone in, skin on chicken breasts instead of legs or do you think it will dry out with white meat?

    • chiknpastry on January 29, 2011 at 1:05 pm

      Hey Em,

      I’m guessing it might dry out… Probably less likely to with less cook time and leaving skin on? Curious to hear how it turns out if you try it!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

 

Feature

The Gut Buster

Eating good, healthy food is an admirable goal. It’s a really good goal. Sometimes though, it’s just. so. dang. hard. Ya feel me? Exhibit...

Read more »

Foodbuzz