Chicken topper
Posted: Tue Dec 24, 2024 9:50 pm
We decided to try a wonderberry glaze on our Christmas Eve chicken dinner. Here's what happened:
I blended up some frozen wonderberries. They thawed out. I put a heaping spoonful of tarragon powder (homegrown) on the chicken breasts as they thawed on the pans. I melted some butter and mixed it with the wonderberries, along with salt, lots of granulated garlic, and some black pepper.
The resulting substance was probably much too thick to call a glaze. It was a paste. Anyway, I should have mixed the tarragon with it instead of adding it to the chicken first, because when I painted the chicken with it, the tarragon came off (even though it had stuck to the chicken firmly previously). We refrigerated it for a while before we cooked it for some reason.
Anyway, it was cooked for a long time on 350° F., covered for part of that time, and uncovered the rest.
The result was, it was very good. It went very well in a Christmas Eve dinner. I was happy.
Anyway, one thing that was really cool was the way the wonderberry paste looked when I mixed the molten butter with it and looked at it under a light. It gleamed a lot. You could tell there were anthocyanins in it.
We have a lot of tarragon, fortunately. I think it tastes (and smells) better if you turn it into powder and use lots of it. Growing it in more sun may or may not help.
Merry Christmas Eve!
I blended up some frozen wonderberries. They thawed out. I put a heaping spoonful of tarragon powder (homegrown) on the chicken breasts as they thawed on the pans. I melted some butter and mixed it with the wonderberries, along with salt, lots of granulated garlic, and some black pepper.
The resulting substance was probably much too thick to call a glaze. It was a paste. Anyway, I should have mixed the tarragon with it instead of adding it to the chicken first, because when I painted the chicken with it, the tarragon came off (even though it had stuck to the chicken firmly previously). We refrigerated it for a while before we cooked it for some reason.
Anyway, it was cooked for a long time on 350° F., covered for part of that time, and uncovered the rest.
The result was, it was very good. It went very well in a Christmas Eve dinner. I was happy.
Anyway, one thing that was really cool was the way the wonderberry paste looked when I mixed the molten butter with it and looked at it under a light. It gleamed a lot. You could tell there were anthocyanins in it.
We have a lot of tarragon, fortunately. I think it tastes (and smells) better if you turn it into powder and use lots of it. Growing it in more sun may or may not help.
Merry Christmas Eve!