Chicken, Artichokes & Lemon Pickles

20m
Prep Time
30m
Cook Time
50m
Ready In


"A Sara Moulton recipe that uses chicken thighs, artichokes, and tasty lemon pickles. Lemon pickles are also another name for preserved lemons. Here they are sliced instead of preserving them whole which saves time on the "pickling" - when pickling them whole, it can take up to a month. Placing it here for safe-keeping. Note: the lemon pickling time is not included in the overall prep. time."

Original is 8 servings

Nutritional

  • Serving Size: 1 (333.6 g)
  • Calories 494.1
  • Total Fat - 34.9 g
  • Saturated Fat - 9.2 g
  • Cholesterol - 194.5 mg
  • Sodium - 2818.2 mg
  • Total Carbohydrate - 11.9 g
  • Dietary Fiber - 4.6 g
  • Sugars - 2.2 g
  • Protein - 34.6 g
  • Calcium - 57.8 mg
  • Iron - 2.5 mg
  • Vitamin C - 41.2 mg
  • Thiamin - 0.2 mg

Step by Step Method

Step 1

Rinse the lemons well and slice them crosswise ¼-inch thick. Arrange half of the slices in one layer (or slightly overlapping) in the bottom of a non corrosive baking dish or pie plate and sprinkle half the salt evenly over the slices. Repeat with the remaining slices and salt, cover and leave at room temperature for at least 12 hours and up to 48 hours (your choice — although the longer they cure, the softer the texture and the stronger the flavor). Rinse the lemons and remove the seeds.

Step 2

Pat the lemons dry after you rinse them. Only half will be used in this recipe; keep the second half, covered, in the fridge for other uses (refer to Note). The pickles will keep for 2 weeks in the fridge.

Step 3

Preheat the oven to 350 F. In a large ovenproof skillet heat 1 tablespoon of the oil over medium high heat. Season the chicken with salt and pepper on the skin side, reduce the heat to medium and working in batches if necessary (if all the chicken does not fit easily in the pan), cook the chicken, skin side down until the skin is nicely browned. Transfer the pieces to a plate and repeat with the remaining chicken if it didn’t all fit in the pan the first time. Pour off all but 2 tablespoons of the fat left in the pan.

Step 4

Pat the artichoke hearts very dry using paper towels. Add them to the skillet and cook them over medium high heat, turning them occasionally until they are golden. Turn off the heat, return the chicken to the skillet, skin side up, and add half the pickled lemon slices. Pour the wine over the skillet and put the skillet on the middle shelf of the oven. Bake the chicken for 20 minutes or until it is just cooked through. Transfer chicken, artichokes, and lemon slices to each of 8 plates and pour some of the juice from the bottom of the skillet over each portion. Sprinkle with cilantro and serve right away.

NOTE: Once cured, there's nothing left to do but rinse off your lemon pickles and decide which of a whole range of dishes they should glorify. You can add them as a garnish to soups, stews and roasted vegetables, chop and combine them with fresh herbs to top fish, slide them into a grilled cheese sandwich, or stir them into grain dishes. I believe that the reason that this recipe doesn't indicate to "pickle" half of the lemon amount is because, normally curing lemons requires making a big batch due to needing to meet a minimum critical mass to produce enough juice to cover the lemons as they cure.


Tips


No special items needed.

1 Reviews

NELady

The chicken and the artichokes were delicious. I followed the recipe as close as I could -- I subbed jarred artichoke hearts for the canned and I used chicken broth instead of wine (we don't have any alcohol in the house). I opted for parsley instead of cilantro. The lemons were very, very interesting. They taste like a salty Sour Patch Kid (the candy). Speaking of alcohol, the lemon pickles would be AMAZING with a shot of good tequila. Every bar in America should be making these lemon pickles! Really enjoyed making this recipe. It was different than anything I've ever made before.

5.0

review by:
(26 Feb 2023)

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