Cháo Gà (Vietnamese Chicken and Rice Porridge)
Ingredients
- 1 yellow onion yellow onion
- 3 1/2 pound) whole chicken
- 1 tablespoon sea salt
- 1 1/2 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon chicken bouillon
- 250 250g jasmine rice
- 2 inch fresh ginger
- 1 1/2 tablespoons fish sauce
- 2 teaspoons ground black pepper
- 100 g green cabbage
- 15 g carrot
- 1 small red onion
- 6 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
- 3 tablespoons sugar
- 1 teaspoon ground black pepper
- Handful Handful cilantro
- 2 bird’s eye chilis bird’s eye chilis
- 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- 4 tablespoons fish sauce
- 2 tablespoons vegetable cooking oil
- 2 small shallots small shallots
- Scallions Scallions Scallions
- Cilantro leaves Cilantro leaves Cilantro leaves
- ground black pepper ground black pepper ground black pepper
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Instructions
- Bring 2 1/2 quarts (10 cups) of water to a boil in a kettle or pot.
- Peel and cut the stem and root ends off the onion to create a flat top and bottom. Set a small frying pan over high heat, place the onion on its flat side to char until blackened, then flip to char the other flat side.
- Place the charred onion and chicken in a large pot. Pour the boiling water over it and season with salt, rock sugar, and chicken or mushroom bouillon, if using. Set the pot over low heat and simmer covered for 1 hour.,Unlike the Western-style of poaching chicken and making chicken stock, this method of pouring boiling water over chicken is used in many Asian cuisines. It results in a succulent and juicy chicken. Typically, the boiling water is poured on and changed out once in the beginning to rinse the chicken, but for the sake of ease, I skipped this extra step in this recipe.,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu
- Fill a large bowl with very cold water and set it next to the stovetop. Use a spider to carefully scoop the cooked chicken out of the pot into the cold water bath. Allow the chicken to chill for about 15 minutes in the water bath. Then, drain it into a colander set in the sink. This will stop the chicken from cooking and makes sure it stays very tender.,Do not discard the hot chicken stock in the pot. You will use it to cook the rice porridge. You can discard the onion.
- While the chicken chills, rinse the rice well under cold running water (at least 3 times) and drain well. Add it to the chicken stock along with the ginger—set aside 1 teaspoon of the ginger for the dipping sauce.,Cover the pot with a lid and bring it to the boil over medium heat. Skim off any fat and foam that floats to the top with a large spoon. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for 25 to 30 minutes until the rice has blossomed and thickened the broth, stirring occasionally. Season the porridge with fish sauce and 1 teaspoon black pepper. If the porridge is too thick for your liking, you can thin it out by adding a little water.,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu
- While the rice cooks, use your hands to tear the chicken meat along the grain into 1/3-inch-wide strips, removing and discarding the bones. Add the pulled chicken on a large plate and toss with the remaining 1 teaspoon black pepper.,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu
- In a large bowl, add the cabbage, carrots, red onion, vinegar, sugar, and black pepper. Toss well to combine. Add the pulled chicken and cilantro, and toss to combine. Set it aside.,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu
- In a small bowl, combine the reserved 1 teaspoon ginger, chilis, vinegar, sugar, and fish sauce. Set it aside.,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu
- Set a small frying pan over medium-low heat. Add the oil and shallots, and fry until golden and crispy, stirring occasionally. Transfer the shallots and the flavorful oil into a small bowl.,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu
- To serve, ladle the warm porridge into soup bowls. Invite your guests to top the porridge to their liking with the fried shallots, scallions, cilantro, and black pepper. I recommend providing each guest with a small bowl of the dipping sauce. The salad is typically dipped into the sauce, not served on top of the porridge.,Cháo is best served immediately, but some would argue that making it ahead of time is even better. Store it in the fridge for a couple of days. It’ll thicken up as it sits and the rice soaks up the broth. Loosen it by adding more broth or water when you reheat it either on the stovetop or microwave. If reheating in the microwave, stir it well halfway through.,Did you love the recipe? Let us know with a rating and review!,Simply Recipes / Uyen Luu
Source
Original recipe: View Original