Tag: chicken

  • Lechon Manok Barbecue Chicken Sliders

    Lechon Manok Barbecue Chicken Sliders

    One day my wife left for Manila to help out one of my daughters who had to transfer to a different room from her dormitory.  So I was left with the cooking chores but I had to drive them to the bus terminal first.  Considering that I did not have enough time to do a proper lunch, I had to figure out what I could do quickly but is not ordinary.  So I figured, why not re-purpose lechon manok (Filipino roasted chicken) and use it as the main ingredient for barbecue chicken sliders?  Why not?

    So on the drive back home, I stopped by the ever reliable Baliwag Lechon stand and got me one lechon manok.  I just asked them to halve it into two instead of chopping it up into smaller pieces.

    Since it was only me and my eldest daughter who were going to have lunch, the recipe that I will be sharing is for 2 people.  When I got home, my daughter asked, what is for lunch?  I replied, Lechon Manok.  And she had this look like she wanted to ask why.  She was surprised on the outcome of our lunch.  She couldn’t believe it that I could do barbecue chicken sliders with a lechon manok.  While having lunch, I asked her if I could repeat this recipe and she said yes!  There were 9 mini dinner rolls, I had 5 and my daughter had 4.  She was satisfied with lunch.

    This is the result:

    barbecue chicken sliders

    Another view:

    barbecue chicken sliders

    Ingredients:

    • 1/2 Lechon manok (Filipino style roasted chicken)
    • 1 pack Marby mini dinner rolls

      barbecue chicken sliders
      I decided to use this kind of dinner rolls, enough for two. Sorry it is just the packaging.
    • 1/3 cup BBQ sauce

      barbecue chicken sliders
      I used this BBQ sauce, Kraft slow simmered original BBQ sauce
    • 2 small onions, sliced into rings
    • 9 slices cheddar cheese
    • 1/4 cup parsley flakes
    • melted butter (enough to cover dinner rolls)

    Instructions:

    1. Shred the 1/2 Lechon manok and discard the bones.barbecue chicken sliders
    2. Slice dinner rolls in half horizontally.barbecue chicken sliders
    3. Put the shredded chicken on the bottom half of the dinner rolls.barbecue chicken sliders
    4. Pour BBQ sauce on chicken.barbecue chicken sliders
    5. Add sliced onions on top, distribute evenly.
    6. Cover with Cheddar cheese slices.barbecue chicken sliders
    7. Sprinkle parsley flakes on top of cheese.
    8. Cover with the top part of the dinner rolls and pour melted butter.barbecue chicken sliders
    9. Bake at 375 deg F for 20 minutes.
    10. Slice and serve hot.

    barbecue chicken sliders

    Lechon Manok Barbecue Chicken Sliders

    This is a western inspired recipe with a Filipino twist. I used Lechon manok which is the Filipino version of roasted chicken. I also used Cheddar cheese slices instead of the original cheese required, which was Jack Pepper. I also included the chicken skin for more flavor.

    • 1/2 piece Lechon manok (Filipino style roasted chicken)
    • 1 pack Marby mini dinner rolls
    • 1/3 cup BBQ sauce
    • 2 pcs onions (small, diced)
    • 9 slices cheddar cheese
    • 1/4 cup parsley flakes
    • melted butter (enough to cover dinner rolls)
    1. Shred the 1/2 Lechon manok and discard the bones.
    2. Slice dinner rolls in half horizontally.

    3. Put the shredded chicken on the bottom half of the dinner rolls.

    4. Pour BBQ sauce on chicken.

    5. Add sliced onions on top, distribute evenly.

    6. Cover with Cheddar cheese slices.

    7. Sprinkle parsley flakes on top of cheese.

    8. Cover with the top part of the dinner rolls and pour melted butter.

    9. Bake at 375 deg F for 20 minutes.

    10. Slice and serve hot.

  • How To Cook Pochero

    How To Cook Pochero

    How to cook Pochero? Pochero is a Filipino stew dish that was inherited from the Spanish. In Spain, they call it Puchero and is also prepared in Mexico and other South American countries.  Pochero consequently reached the Philippines during the Spanish colonial period of our history.  The Spanish word puchero means stewpot in English.  Pochero is almost the same as the Spanish dish called cocido but does not use colorants like paprika.

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    Pochero is a stew of meat, vegetable, root crops and legumes.  In Andalusia, Spain, they considered this as peasant stew in the old times. This is because the meat usually used were from the cheapest cuts of pork, beef and chicken.   The vegetables often used where whatever was in season.  It certainly is not a peasant stew anymore!

    How To Cook Pochero

    What makes the Filipino Pochero different in contrast to the Spanish Cocido?

    Unlike in Spain, the Filipino Pochero is different because it uses tomato sauce rather than paprika.  But what sets it apart from other tomato-based stews?  It is because ripe plantain banana or ‘saba’ is a must.  Without a plantain, it it is not a pochero.  First of all, the plantain adds a natural sweetness to the dish. Secondly, plantain helps in producing the interesting flavor of the stew. Thirdly, Filipinos probably added plantain in pochero because it is very common in the Philippines and is easily available.  The plantain therefore makers pochero a uniquely Filipino dish.

    The meat usually used in pochero is beef.  Likewise, pork and chicken are ok to use too.  Similarly, some people combine the meats but I would rather use only one kind.  I remember my Uncle Jinggoy and his beef pochero.  He usually boils the beef first and sets aside the broth to make a soup out of it. Then he adds some of the vegetables like cabbage and green beans.  He then serves the dish with an eggplant relish that has vinegar and loads of garlic in it!

    How to cook pochero?  Simple!  Just ry this simple pochero recipe and I am almost sure your family will love this!  It is certainly an easy pochero recipe and above all tastes so good!

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    How To Cook Pochero

    Ingredients:

    • 1/2 kilo meat cubed (chicken, beef, or pork)
    • 1 bunch bok choy (pechay)
    • 1 small cabbage, quartered
    • 1 large plantain (saba) banana (ripe), chopped
    • 100 grams long green beans
    • 1 medium sized potato, cubed (sweet potato optional)
    • 2 medium tomatoes, diced.  You can also use canned tomatoes like THIS.
    • 1 medium onion, diced
    • 1 teaspoon garlic, minced
    • 1 tablespoon whole pepper corn
    • 2 tablespoons cooking oil
    • 1 small can tomato sauce
    • 1 cup chick peas (garbanzos)
    • 1 cup water
    • 1 chicken cube
    • Salt and Pepper to taste
    • Sugar to taste

    Instructions:

    1. Heat cooking oil in a cooking pot.
    2. Sauté garlic, onions, and tomatoes.
    3. Add meat and cook until the color turns light brown.
    4. Add-in chicken cube, whole pepper corn, and tomato sauce. Stir.
    5. Add water and let boil. Simmer until meat is tender (about 30 to 40 minutes).
    6. In a separate frying pan, fry potatoes and saba until golden light brown. Set aside.
    7. Add-in potato, saba, and chick peas. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes.
    8. Add cabbage and long green beans. Cook for 5 minutes.
    9. Stir-in the bok choy. Cover the pot and turn off the heat.
    10. Let the residual heat cook the bok choy (about 5 minutes).
    11. Season with salt, pepper and sugar according to desired taste.
    12. Transfer to a serving plate and serve with rice, eat the Filipino way and enjoy!

     

    How To Cook Pochero

     

    Pochero

    Pochero is a Filipino stew dish that was inherited from the Spanish. It is called Puchero in Spain and is also prepared in Mexico and other South American countries.

    • 1/2 kilo meat (cubed (chicken, beef, or pork))
    • 2 pcs medium tomatoes (diced)
    • 1 pc medium onion (diced)
    • 1 tsp garlic (minced)
    • 1 tbsp whole pepper corn
    • 1 small can tomato sauce
    • 1 cup chick peas (garbanzos)
    • 1 pc plantain banana (ripe) (large , chopped)
    • 1 pc potato (medium sized, cubed (sweet potato optional))
    • 1 pc cabbage (small, quartered)
    • 100 grams long green beans
    • 1 bunch bok choy (pechay)
    • 1 cup water
    • 2 tbsp cooking oil
    • 1 pc chicken cube
    • Salt and Pepper to taste
    • Sugar to taste
    1. Heat cooking oil in a cooking pot

    2. Sauté garlic, onions, and tomatoes.

    3. Add meat and cook until the color turns light brown.

    4. Add-in chicken cube, whole pepper corn, and tomato sauce. Stir.

    5. Add water and let boil. Simmer until meat is tender (about 30 to 40 minutes).

    6. In a separate frying pan, fry potatoes and saba until golden light brown. Set aside.

    7. Add-in potato, saba, and chick peas. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes.

    8. Add cabbage and long green beans. Cook for 5 minutes.

    9. Stir-in the bok choy. Cover the pot and turn off the heat.

    10. Let the residual heat cook the bok choy (about 5 minutes).

    11. Season with salt, pepper and sugar according to desired taste.

    12. Transfer to a serving plate and serve with rice, eat the Filipino way and enjoy!

    Other recipes may be found HERE.