Andrew Carmellini's Chicken Pot Pie

Andrew Carmellini's Chicken Pot Pie might be a good recipe to expand your main course recipe box. This recipe makes 4 servings with 749 calories, 44g of protein, and 50g of fat each. For $3.56 per serving, this recipe covers 38% of your daily requirements of vitamins and minerals. From preparation to the plate, this recipe takes approximately 2 hours. 125 people have made this recipe and would make it again. It is brought to you by Serious Eats. If you have carrots, egg, parmesan cheese, and a few other ingredients on hand, you can make it. All things considered, we decided this recipe deserves a spoonacular score of 88%. This score is excellent. If you like this recipe, take a look at these similar recipes: Andrew Carmellini's Fried Chicken, Andrew Carmellini's Green Grits, and The Crisper Whisperer: Andrew Carmellini's Cauliflower.

Servings: 4

 

Ingredients:

5 small carrots, or 2 to 3 large carrots, peeled and chopped (1 cup)

2 medium celery stalks, chopped (1 cup)

7 cups chicken broth

6 chicken legs (about 3 pounds)

1/2 pound cremini mushrooms (about 12 mushrooms), stems removed, caps quartered (2 cups)

1 egg

1/3 cup all-purpose flour

1 cup fresh peas

2 tablespoons fresh thyme leaves

Pinch of fresh-ground black pepper

1/2 pound new potatoes, cut into small chunks (1 cup)

1/3 cup grated Parmesan cheese

Pinch of salt

5 tablespoons salted butter

1 tablepoon chipotle-flavored Tabasco sauce

Equipment:

microwave

stove

pot

plastic wrap

slotted spoon

knife

ladle

bowl

wooden spoon

whisk

oven

rolling pin

pastry brush

baking sheet

Cooking instruction summary:

Procedures 1 To make the dough: Melt the butter in the microwave or in a small pot on the stove so it’s just liquified.  2 Using a tabletop mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the flour, salt, butter, and 1/2 cup water. 3 Mix everything together on medium-low speed (#2 on a KitchenAid) for about 2 minutes, until the mixture forms a rough dough. If it’s too crumbly, add a bit more water; if it’s too wet, add a little more flour.  4 Turn the dough out onto a floured surface and use your hands to bring it together into a ball; then flatten it out. Knead the dough, pushing it flat with the heels of your hands, forming it back into a circle, turning and flattening it again, until you have a pretty smooth ball. 5 Wrap the dough well in plastic wrap and let it chill in the fridge for at least 8 hours. (The dough will hold in the fridge for up to 5 days at this point.) 6 To make the filling: Combine the chicken legs (skin, bones, and all), chicken broth, salt, and pepper in a large pot and bring it up to a simmer, uncovered, over high heat.  7 Cook the chicken for about 45 to 50 minutes at a very low simmer, so it poaches instead of boiling (the broth should be at 160° to 170°F).  8 When a knife goes into the chicken easily and it’s more or less falling off the bone, use a slotted spoon to pull it out of the pot, pile it on a plate, and put it in the fridge to cool down until you’re able to handle it. Don’t dump out the broth! Instead, pour it into a bowl—it’s the key to pot-pie goodness. Use a ladle to skim off any fat that rises to the top, so you don’t end up with oily broth. You should have about 6 cups of broth.  9 Rinse the pot and put it back on the stove. Add the butter, and melt it over low heat.  10 When the butter has melted, add the flour and cook it over low heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, for about 1 minute, so the butter and flour are completely combined.  11 Add the chicken broth back to the pot, whisking everything together. Turn the heat up to medium and bring the mixture to a low simmer.  12 Meanwhile, take the chicken out of the fridge, remove the skin, and pull out the bones. Use your hands to tear the meat into chunks.  13 Cook the broth for about 5 minutes, so that the taste of the raw flour disappears and the broth is thick and full of chickeny flavor. Use a ladle or spoon to skim off any white foam that rises to the top. Then add the carrots, onions, celery, mushrooms, potatoes, and thyme, and continue cooking for about 10 to 15 minutes, until the vegetables are cooked but not mushy. 14 Turn off the heat, and add the peas and chipotle Tabasco. Stir well to combine, and then stir in the chicken meat. You should have a thick, soupy mixture. (The filling can hold in the fridge for up to a day at this point.)  15 To finish the dish: Take the dough out of the fridge an hour before you’re ready to use it. The dough will be really tough, so you want to bring it to room temperature so it’s easier to work with.  16 Preheat the oven to 425°F.  17 Here’s the key to this dish: the filling has to be nice and hot, but not boiling. So if you’ve let the filling cool down, return it to the stove and heat it up gently.  18 Flour your work surface, and using either a rolling pin or a pasta roller, roll the dough out as thin as you can get it without tearing it.  19 Turn your casserole over so it’s face-down on top of the dough. Use a sharp knife to cut the dough about 11/2 inches outside the edge of the casserole (so you have a piece of dough that fits the casserole and has an overhang). If you’re making individual pot pies, make sure you cut out all your shapes at the same time. 20 Make an egg wash by whisking the egg, salt, pepper, and 2 tablespoons of water together in a small bowl. Pour the filling into the casserole. (If you’re using individual casseroles, ladle about 11/2 cups into each one. Make sure you get chicken, vegetables, and broth into every casserole.)  21 Brush the outside edges and the top lip of the casserole with the egg wash, using a pastry brush (or, working very carefully, with a spoon). Do the same with the outside edges of the dough. Then flip the dough over on top of the casserole so it completely covers the top. You want to get it tight, like a drum, so it closes all the air in. Smooth and tap the edges to make sure it’s all sealed.  22 Brush the entire surface of the dough with the egg wash, being sure to cover all of the edges (this will help the top of the pot pie come out nice and golden brown). Sprinkle the Parmesan on top. Put the pot pie (or the individual pot pies) on a baking sheet, and put the sheet on the middle oven rack. Bake for 10 minutes. Then rotate the sheet and bake for another 15 minutes or so, until the pot pie is golden brown and crispy on top. When you cut into it, you’ll see that the pastry is like a dome, with a hollow of air underneath it and the filling below that. Do this at the table for maximum chef drama.

 

Step by step:


1. To make the dough: Melt the butter in the microwave or in a small pot on the stove so it’s just liquified. 

2. Using a tabletop mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the flour, salt, butter, and 1/2 cup water.

3. Mix everything together on medium-low speed (#2 on a Kitchen

4. Aid) for about 2 minutes, until the mixture forms a rough dough. If it’s too crumbly, add a bit more water; if it’s too wet, add a little more flour. 

5. Turn the dough out onto a floured surface and use your hands to bring it together into a ball; then flatten it out. Knead the dough, pushing it flat with the heels of your hands, forming it back into a circle, turning and flattening it again, until you have a pretty smooth ball.

6. Wrap the dough well in plastic wrap and let it chill in the fridge for at least 8 hours. (The dough will hold in the fridge for up to 5 days at this point.)


To make the filling

1. Combine the chicken legs (skin, bones, and all), chicken broth, salt, and pepper in a large pot and bring it up to a simmer, uncovered, over high heat. 

2. Cook the chicken for about 45 to 50 minutes at a very low simmer, so it poaches instead of boiling (the broth should be at 160° to 170°F). 

3. When a knife goes into the chicken easily and it’s more or less falling off the bone, use a slotted spoon to pull it out of the pot, pile it on a plate, and put it in the fridge to cool down until you’re able to handle it. Don’t dump out the broth! Instead, pour it into a bowl—it’s the key to pot-pie goodness. Use a ladle to skim off any fat that rises to the top, so you don’t end up with oily broth. You should have about 6 cups of broth. 

4. Rinse the pot and put it back on the stove.

5. Add the butter, and melt it over low heat. 

6. When the butter has melted, add the flour and cook it over low heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, for about 1 minute, so the butter and flour are completely combined. 

7. Add the chicken broth back to the pot, whisking everything together. Turn the heat up to medium and bring the mixture to a low simmer. 

8. Meanwhile, take the chicken out of the fridge, remove the skin, and pull out the bones. Use your hands to tear the meat into chunks. 

9. Cook the broth for about 5 minutes, so that the taste of the raw flour disappears and the broth is thick and full of chickeny flavor. Use a ladle or spoon to skim off any white foam that rises to the top. Then add the carrots, onions, celery, mushrooms, potatoes, and thyme, and continue cooking for about 10 to 15 minutes, until the vegetables are cooked but not mushy.

10. Turn off the heat, and add the peas and chipotle Tabasco. Stir well to combine, and then stir in the chicken meat. You should have a thick, soupy mixture. (The filling can hold in the fridge for up to a day at this point.) 

11. To finish the dish: Take the dough out of the fridge an hour before you’re ready to use it. The dough will be really tough, so you want to bring it to room temperature so it’s easier to work with. 

12. Preheat the oven to 425°F. 

13. Here’s the key to this dish: the filling has to be nice and hot, but not boiling. So if you’ve let the filling cool down, return it to the stove and heat it up gently. 

14. Flour your work surface, and using either a rolling pin or a pasta roller, roll the dough out as thin as you can get it without tearing it. 

15. Turn your casserole over so it’s face-down on top of the dough. Use a sharp knife to cut the dough about 11/2 inches outside the edge of the casserole (so you have a piece of dough that fits the casserole and has an overhang). If you’re making individual pot pies, make sure you cut out all your shapes at the same time.

16. Make an egg wash by whisking the egg, salt, pepper, and 2 tablespoons of water together in a small bowl.

17. Pour the filling into the casserole. (If you’re using individual casseroles, ladle about 11/2 cups into each one. Make sure you get chicken, vegetables, and broth into every casserole.) 

18. Brush the outside edges and the top lip of the casserole with the egg wash, using a pastry brush (or, working very carefully, with a spoon). Do the same with the outside edges of the dough. Then flip the dough over on top of the casserole so it completely covers the top. You want to get it tight, like a drum, so it closes all the air in. Smooth and tap the edges to make sure it’s all sealed. 

19. Brush the entire surface of the dough with the egg wash, being sure to cover all of the edges (this will help the top of the pot pie come out nice and golden brown). Sprinkle the Parmesan on top.

20. Put the pot pie (or the individual pot pies) on a baking sheet, and put the sheet on the middle oven rack.

21. Bake for 10 minutes. Then rotate the sheet and bake for another 15 minutes or so, until the pot pie is golden brown and crispy on top. When you cut into it, you’ll see that the pastry is like a dome, with a hollow of air underneath it and the filling below that. Do this at the table for maximum chef drama.


Nutrition Information:

Quickview
749k Calories
43g Protein
49g Total Fat
31g Carbs
29% Health Score
Limit These
Calories
749k
37%

Fat
49g
76%

  Saturated Fat
19g
121%

Carbohydrates
31g
11%

  Sugar
5g
6%

Cholesterol
264mg
88%

Sodium
2008mg
87%

Get Enough Of These
Protein
43g
88%

Vitamin A
6653IU
133%

Selenium
54µg
77%

Vitamin C
63mg
77%

Vitamin B3
15mg
75%

Phosphorus
584mg
58%

Vitamin B6
1mg
51%

Vitamin B2
0.74mg
44%

Potassium
1439mg
41%

Manganese
0.72mg
36%

Zinc
4mg
32%

Vitamin B5
3mg
31%

Copper
0.59mg
29%

Vitamin B1
0.44mg
29%

Iron
4mg
27%

Vitamin K
27µg
26%

Vitamin B12
1µg
25%

Folate
91µg
23%

Magnesium
89mg
22%

Fiber
5g
22%

Calcium
210mg
21%

Vitamin E
1mg
9%

Vitamin D
0.75µg
5%

covered percent of daily need
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Food Trivia

The fig is also a fertility symbol and the Arab association with male genitals is so strong that the original word 'fig' is considered improper.

Food Joke

The Passover test [My thanks to Jeff G for the following] Sean is waiting for a bus when another man joins him at the bus stop. After 20 minutes of waiting, Sean takes out a sandwich from his lunch box and starts to eat. But noticing the other man watching, Sean asks, "Would you like one? My wife has made me plenty." "Thank you very much, but I must decline your kind offer," says the other man, "I’m Rabbi Levy." "Nice to meet you, Rabbi," says Sean, "but my sandwiches are alright for you to eat. They only contain cheese. There’s no meat in them." "It’s very kind of you," says Rabbi Levy, "but today we Jews are celebrating Passover. It would be a great sin to eat a sandwich because during the 8 days of Passover, we cannot eat bread. In fact it would be a sin comparable to the sin of adultery." "OK," says Sean, "but it’s difficult for me to understand the significance of what you’ve just said." Many weeks later, Sean and Rabbi Levy meet again. Sean says, "Do you remember, Rabbi, that when we last met, I offered you a sandwich which you refused because you said eating bread on Passover would be as great a sin as that of adultery?" Rabbi Levy replies, "Yes, I remember saying that." "Well, Rabbi," says Sean, "that day, I went over to my mistress’s apartment and told her what you said. We then tried out both the sins, but I must admit, we just couldn’t see the comparison."

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