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From Michel Nischan, Heartbeat at the W New York Hotel,
New York, NY
Pan Roasted Chicken with
Heirloom Tomatoes and Fresh Bay Leaf
Yield: 4 Servings
Ingredients:
- 2 each skin-on, boneless chicken breasts, about 6 ounces
each
- 2 each fresh bay leaves
- 2 teaspoons grapeseed oil
- 4 to 6 cloves roasted garlic
- 2 cups reduced rich chicken stock
- 1 each purple cherokee tomato sliced 1/2 inch thick
- 1 each big daddy sunshine tomato sliced 1/2 inch thick
- 2 to 3 each small green zebra tomato sliced 1/2 inch
thick
- 6 each yellow pear tomato, slit in half lengthwise
- 6 each red pear tomato, slit in half lengthwise
- sea salt and freshly milled pepper to taste
- 6 year aged balsamic vinegar to taste
Insert a fresh bay leaf between the skin and meat of each
chicken breast. Cover and refrigerate for one hour.
Remove the bay leaves and reserve. Heat a medium sauté
pan over a low flame* for several minutes until he pan is
quite hot. Lightly season each chicken breast with salt and
pepper on both sides. Rub the grapeseed oil onto the skin
of each chicken breast and place the breasts, skin side down,
into the hot saut&eactue; pan. Turn the heat up to medium
and allow the breasts to cook until well browned. Turn the
chicken breasts over then use a paper towel to absorb the
excess fat.
Add the roasted garlic and allow to heat until you can smell
their perfume. Add the chicken stock and simmer for 3 to 5
minutes, depending on the thickness of the chicken breasts.
Remove the breasts to a heated holding plate and keep warm.
Increase the flame and reduce the chicken stock until it
coats a spoon like syrup. Reduce the flame and add the sliced
tomatoes. Allow the tomatoes to just heat through. Swirl the
pan, rather than stirring, so the tomatoes retain their individual
shape and color. Remove from the flame immediately and swirl
in the reserved bay leaves. Season to taste with salt and
pepper. Add balsamic vinegar if the sauce needs acidity. Divide
the tomato sauce to the centers of two warmed bowls or deep-rimmed
plates. Place the chicken breasts over the sauce, garnish
with the bay leaves, and serve with toasted crusty bread.
*This method of preparation uses a low
temperature saut&eactue;. Leaving the pan over a low flame
for a long period of time allows the pan to get hot enough
to put a good sear on the chicken. When the chicken is added
to the pan, the initial heat sears the skin while the cool
temperature of the flesh reduces the heat of the pan shortly
afterward. Oil is rubbed on the breasts rather than placed
in the pan. This method, combined with the heat absorption
of the breast, protects the oil from breaking down which would
create free radicals. Turning the fire up once the chicken
is added gently brings the heat of the pan back to a point
which allows the skin to crisp without scorching.
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