Jane Ann's Chicken Salad
4 chicken breast halves, cooked* and chopped
4 chicken breast halves, cooked* and chopped
(large chunks are fine—they break up with mixing)
(celery to chicken ratio approx. 1½ to 2)
Crushed pineapple in sweet syrup, well drained
("push" juice out through a strainer)
(l large can is usually enough but "lots" is good—
(l large can is usually enough but "lots" is good—
add a small can too?)
Hellman's mayonnaise—always use Hellman's
(enough to bind)
Toasted* sliced almonds
(a few handfuls)
Salt and pepper to taste (I like lots of pepper)
Proportions are really approximate. I've never measured, just add by taste.
*To cook chicken:
I use breasts with bone and skin on.
Cover with water to which you've added
chunks of onion, celery, and carrots.
Cover pot and heat over med. to med. high just below a boil
Cover pot and heat over med. to med. high just below a boil
(boiling toughens the meat).
Reduce to med. low or low to simmer (that means barely bubbling
occasionally) for 20-30 minutes. (Low simmering keeps meat tender.)
Remove chicken from pot. I lay it on a dinner plate
Remove chicken from pot. I lay it on a dinner plate
with the pot lid lying on top, just to keep it from drying out,
while it drains and cools.
When cool, remove skin and pull meat from bones.
When cool, remove skin and pull meat from bones.
(A thrifty cook would then make soup with the stock,
but I'm usually too lazy.)
*To toast almonds:
Pour a large pkg. of sliced almonds (8 oz.?—the size of a bag of chocolate chips) into a large dry skillet
*To toast almonds:
Pour a large pkg. of sliced almonds (8 oz.?—the size of a bag of chocolate chips) into a large dry skillet
(Teflon coated if you have one). No oil.
Set on stove over med. heat. Stir pretty much constantly till brown.
Important: Almonds will continue crackling and browning
Set on stove over med. heat. Stir pretty much constantly till brown.
Important: Almonds will continue crackling and browning
even when removed from heat, so err on the side of under-browning.
They will also burn very quickly,
so be sure to keep them moving in the pan.
Allow to cool before adding to chicken salad.
If I make a really large batch, I zip-lock bag the left-overs
and use in tossed salads.
Like anything you cook often, you get better and better
Like anything you cook often, you get better and better
each time you make it. Soon you'll be a chicken salad queen.
6 comments:
You are a doll! Thanks so much. I just love chicken salad. It was the first meal I had after turning in my dissertation. Well, real meal. As soon as I turned in my dissertation, we headed for Disney World. The next day, I slept in and then my parents took me to lunch at The Land in Epcot. I had chicken salad. I loved it. Mostly because I could take time to taste the food again. So thank you for the recipe.
I grew up in a Miracle Whip and margarine family -- one (or is it two?) of the delights of my adult life was to discover real mayonnaise (it's Best Foods west of the Mississippi, Hellman's east) and real butter. Life is too short for chemical substitutes - in your food anyway?! LOL!
How funny, Pat! Yes, we only use butter (I'm blessed with embarrassingly low cholesterol and Don doesn't care if he dies tomorrow as long as he eats his way there). Actually, I can't stand mayonnaise, but some things just call for it, and even I have learned there is no substitute for Hellman's. Very funny about "west of the Mississippi." When I first visited my daughter in Malibu, I wanted to make batches of homemade goodies to leave with her. I ransacked the Malibu Ralph's trying to find Hellman's (wondering what kind of Philestines inhabit a place where there's no Hellman's). I was thinking I finally found it, but maybe I did have to settle for Best. Wish I could remember--it would be funny to think I really had Hellman's all along. Thanks for the clarification.
I've always wondered why the different names for the east and west sides of the country? Seems silly, but as long as I can get it under some name, I'm happy.
I've always wondered that, too. Also McCormick's spices. They were called Schilling's on one side of the Mississippi.
Jane Ann, I did the same thing as you, only opposite. When I was in Ohio I looked for the Best Foods and couldn't find it.
I guess we have more regional differences than just accents and politics, huh?
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