Back in May, I made a spicy slaw from Tyler Florence’s Eat This Book and then realized there were several other things in that book I needed to make. One of those other things was this African-spiced chicken. In the book, the complete dish involves shredding the chicken and wrapping it in flatbread with apricot couscous and the sauce. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but I really just wanted the chicken and the green olive sauce. I was drawn in by the mix of spices rubbed on the chicken and the burnished, oven-roasted, finished bird, and I had to find out how it tasted with that sauce.
The spice mix was made by toasting broken cinnamon sticks, cloves, cumin seeds, coriander seeds, fennel seeds, peppercorns, and sweet paprika in a dry skillet. Once the heat made the spices aromatic, they were placed in a coffee grinder which I use just for spices. Salt was added, and the mixture was ground to a powder. The spice mixture was rubbed onto the chicken, and I always loosen the skin over the breast so as to season under the skin as well. Then, cilantro, one halved lemon, and on halved head of garlic were placed in the cavity. I left the chicken in the refrigerator for a few hours to absorb the flavors, and then it was roasted in a 400 degree F oven for just over an hour. For the sauce, shallots and one red chile were sauteed in olive oil until the shallots were caramelized. That mixture was added to a food processor with one half pound of pitted, green Spanish olives, parsley leaves, sherry vinegar, lemon juice, and olive oil. That was pureed until very smooth.
Not only did those spices smell wonderful as the chicken roasted, they also really permeated the meat. Then, there was the sauce. The sauteed shallots sweetened the brininess of the olives, the parsley gave it herby freshness, and the oil smoothed it out nicely. It complemented the chicken well, and served as a nice dressing with some mixed baby greens. I can also report that the leftover chicken made one of the best chicken salads I’ve had. This was a twist on roasted chicken I'll be repeating often.
The spice mix was made by toasting broken cinnamon sticks, cloves, cumin seeds, coriander seeds, fennel seeds, peppercorns, and sweet paprika in a dry skillet. Once the heat made the spices aromatic, they were placed in a coffee grinder which I use just for spices. Salt was added, and the mixture was ground to a powder. The spice mixture was rubbed onto the chicken, and I always loosen the skin over the breast so as to season under the skin as well. Then, cilantro, one halved lemon, and on halved head of garlic were placed in the cavity. I left the chicken in the refrigerator for a few hours to absorb the flavors, and then it was roasted in a 400 degree F oven for just over an hour. For the sauce, shallots and one red chile were sauteed in olive oil until the shallots were caramelized. That mixture was added to a food processor with one half pound of pitted, green Spanish olives, parsley leaves, sherry vinegar, lemon juice, and olive oil. That was pureed until very smooth.
Not only did those spices smell wonderful as the chicken roasted, they also really permeated the meat. Then, there was the sauce. The sauteed shallots sweetened the brininess of the olives, the parsley gave it herby freshness, and the oil smoothed it out nicely. It complemented the chicken well, and served as a nice dressing with some mixed baby greens. I can also report that the leftover chicken made one of the best chicken salads I’ve had. This was a twist on roasted chicken I'll be repeating often.
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What a wonderfully spicy dish! So flavorful, yummy!
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Rosa
I've been wanting some flavors that are a bit more exotic than my usual - this sounds perfect. I have all those spices on hand but wouldn't have thought of the combination. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI love exotic dish like this one Lisa. I am so drooling right now.
ReplyDeleteI love chicken, esp when it's a hottie. ^^
ReplyDeleteIt's our turn to host a dinner party next week and the theme is West/East African. This is a nice flavor combination for the chicken. That sounds delicious.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful dish. Must be so good with all the spices.
ReplyDeleteoh my gosh! that olive sauce looks and sounds amazing! i am definitely trying this!! it sounds so good. i love olives!
ReplyDeleteThis is bursting with so much flavor..... with the spices and the olives..
ReplyDeleteThat sauce sounds delicious! I can see how it WOULD make a great salad dressing, too. Bet it would be good drizzled over grilled veggies, too.
ReplyDeleteholy chicken! I'm smelling all the wonderful spices from here!
ReplyDeleteOkay, we love all things spicy, but this is totally radical and I love it! I can hardly wait to give it a try (especially now that cooler weather has arrived, even in West Texas).
ReplyDeleteEver notice how your entire menu changes with the seasons? Ever gain poundage from it? Nah! Me neither. (HA!)
I love green olives and I think this sauce is wicked good. And I love all the other spices which you added as well. Can almost smell the aroma from here!
ReplyDeleteall those spices sound amazing. i can only imagine how aromatic this dish was. when we went to morocco we had a lovely green olive sauce :)
ReplyDeleteThat is one very good looking chicken! The spice combination sounds wonderful
ReplyDeleteoh, good golly, that mixture of spices sounds ridiculously fragrant and amazing! GLORIOUS dish, lisa!
ReplyDeleteand your "not that there's anything wrong with that" line made me think of good ol' seinfeld and smile. not sure if that was your intention, but thanks anyway. :)
Oh, that looks delicious. I love the use of olives in West African cooking, and the rub is a great alternative to the usual herb, garlic and butter rub that I put on chicken. I will have to try this!
ReplyDeletereally looks delicious. i want it now.
ReplyDeleteThe roasted chicken looks out of this world delicious!! Love the olive sauce too - it's so unique!
ReplyDeleteThe spice mix sounds so aromatic and flavorful! I also love the green olive sauce here!
ReplyDeleteYou got a lot of us drooling over this one!! I just roasted a chicken a couple of days ago but next time, I'm going to have to try this combo of spices! It sounds amazing! You should submit this to Tyler Florence Fridays!
ReplyDeleteI love this kind of food. Can I come over?
ReplyDeleteWow, really! This chicken looks super delicious! I love olives and they are not so frequently used for cooked dishes, this is a good addition.
ReplyDeletevat a great spice combo!!! yummmm!!! love it very much lisa!!
ReplyDeletecheers and have a great weekend! :)
That chicken looks so beautiful and flavoursome! I cna practically smell the gorgeous aroma from looking at those spices :)
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of the flavors in a North African tagine -- all briney and spicy. I love the thought of it.
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking that sauce (or some variation thereof) is going to visit my kitchen one of these days.
Wow, what a pop in your mouth combination of spices! I bet your kitchen smelled soooooo good! Lovely dish.
ReplyDeleteLisa, that sauce is to die for! I love it!
ReplyDeleteOh wow - this looks amazing. I love green olives in dishes like this. I cannot wait to give it a try
ReplyDeletewow !! what an amazing concoction!! love the idea of green olive sauce over chicken!! yummy
ReplyDeleteThe chicken looks truly yummy and the green olive sauce is amazing! I would love to try making this sauce someday!
ReplyDeleteOh my! This chicken looks out of this world! I am dyyying to make it now :) And beautiful pictures too!
ReplyDeleteThe skin on that chicken would not last a second in my kitchen...the spice combination is fantastic...not to mention the olives, if I did not eat those first too! Ha
ReplyDeleteWooooo.. all those spices must have made it so fragrant. I guess this sauce would go with so many other recipes, I am thinking Salmon.
ReplyDeleteThe sauce sounds amazing! Now I know how you must have felt when you saw this recipe and wanted to taste the spice-rubbed chicken and olive sauce; the craving has been passed on to me. 8-)
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