Sep 04 2010
Thursday Dinner: Chicken Pilau
When Megan was a baby, one of our father’s grad students moved in with us. His name was Gilbert, and he was from Tanzania. Due to political unrest and other unpleasant things of that nature, his wealthy family was unable to get money out of Africa and into upstate New York.
I’m guessing that his stay with us outlasted his temporary financial embarrassment, since he lived with us for a couple of years. He may even have stayed with us until he graduated and went home.
We stayed in touch over the years, Gilbert-style. No writing, no emailing, just the occasional phone call saying “I’m at the airport – can you pick me up?” or, memorably, “Can you buy a truck for me and ship it? Here’s the money.” Gilbert took Dad with him on safari, negotiating prices for lodging and then explaining to the surprised hoteliers that Dad was his brother. He introduced Dad to the Maasai, who called him “The Old White Man Who Walks Far”. And that was before his knee replacement.
Gilbert sometimes cooked for us – in retrospect, I imagine Dad was quite relieved not to have to cook for seven people every night – and one of our favorite recipes was his Chicken Pilau. I made it this week for our Thursday dinner, perhaps inspired by the very thoughtful gift Megan made for our brother’s birthday. She copied the cookbooks (and accompanying drawings) Dad made for us girls, and made Jonathan one of his own.
Here’s the recipe. I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed that little stroll down memory lane.
Chicken Pilau
1 cup white rice
1 onion
2 cloves garlic
2 stalks celery
3 cups chicken stick
Cooked chicken, equivalent to 1/4 bird, cut into pieces
2 sticks cinnamon
15-20 whole cloves
2 tablespoons oi
Chop the onion, garlic, and celery finely. Sauté in large frying pan until tender, increase heat, add uncooked rice, and continue sautéeing until the rice is golden. Stir well to avoid burning. Turn down heat, add chicken stock, and simmer for ten minutes, then add cinnamon and cloves and chicken – this is the recipe of an African friend and there the amount of meat per portion is small. [Note: I just put everything in at once, and it was fine.] Simmer for another ten minutes – when the rice should be tender – or transfer to the oven (medium heat) in closed dish, where it can remain for some time.
6 Responses to “Thursday Dinner: Chicken Pilau”
Thanks for the recipe, sounds good, will try this, I love chicken.
Thanks!
Since it says that the amount of chicken per portion is small, could you up the ante?
Think you could use tofu? I think I could, since it already cooked chicken… and what is the difference between white cloves and the dark cloves?
I keep meaning to try the other chicken recipe of your Dad’s that you posted, but haven’t yet. Will definitely let you know when I do!
(sorry for all the annoying questions – I like new recipes! Everyone else eats chicken but me, I typically substitute tofu, and in a casserole it usually works. But sometimes, it doesn’t. Tofu is still tofu and definitely NOT chicken, even if there is breadcrumbs on it!)
I actually did up the ante this time around, and it was great.
I’ve never heard of white cloves. Maybe like white peppercorns? I used the dark ones. It sounds like a lot, but it works.
As for tofu…I’m not a big fan, so I’m not sure about that one. Let me know if it works!
Questions are not at all annoying!
oh WHOLE cloves, not white cloves! yikes, I must be tired.
Thank you!
Made this tonight, and it was fantastic. Thanks for the recipe!
Amber – You have three kids, including a newborn – of course you’re tired! ~hugs~
Alison – Yay! You made my day. So glad you enjoyed it!