Well, This Certainly Will Warm You Up on a Cold Night
0 Comment
Argo cornstarch, baking powder, baking soda, barilla pasta, Bertolli extra-virgin olive oil, black pepper, Bob's Red Mill, boneless, boneless skinless, boneless skinless chicken, Borden, brown sugar, butter, Campbell’s soups, casserole, chasseur, chicken, chicken and mushrooms, Chicken Chasseur, chicken recipe, chicken stock, Chiquita, Clabber Girl, College Inn, Cool Whip, country, country French, crock pot, Daisy sour cream, dessert, Dole, domino sugar, easy, easy recipe, eat, Eggland's Best eggs, entree, food, French, French cuisine, French food, French recipe, Gold Medal flour, granulated sugar, Green Giant, Hershey, Hodgkin’s Mill, home, home recipe, Jell-O, Jif peanut butter, Johnsonville, keebler, kosher salt, Kraft, Land O Lakes, land o lakes butter, Land O'Lakes, Land O'Lakes butter, Libby, main course, main dish, McCormick spices, Morton salt, mushroom, mushrooms, olive oil, Pam Cooking Spray, Pepperidge Farm, Philadelphia cream cheese, Pompeian, Pompeian olive oil, Powdered sugar, recipe, Ritz crackers, rustic, rustic French, Sara Lee, Sargento, simple, simple recipe, skinless, slow cooker, Swanson, Swanson chicken stock, Swanson's, Thorn Apple Valley, Toll House, TruMoo milk, tyson, vanilla, vanilla extract, Vlasic, Wesson vegetable oil, whipped topping
Chicken Chasseur is a savory, rustic French recipe that makes for great comfort food during the colder times of year. The sauce (which itself has plenty of mushrooms and tomatoes) goes nicely over rice, pasta, mashed potatoes, and even a variety of different veggies.
“Chasseur” is actually the French word for “hunter,” though I’m not sure why that word would be associated with chicken. Perhaps it is meant to refer to chicken cooked well enough that even a life-long hunter would enjoy, or perhaps this is the sort of meal that would be prepared for a hunter while he was away and served at the end of a very long hunt. More traditional versions of this recipe leave the skin on the kitchen and even include a bit of cognac. Minus the cognac and with skinless boneless chicken, this version of the recipe is a bit lighter and lower on the calories, but I assure you that it still has a hearty, multi-dimensional, country-style flavor.
Recipe and photo courtesy of 12 Tomatoes
USE THE RED NEXT PAGE LINK BELOW FOR THE RECIPE AND INGREDIENTS