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A hearty blend of chicken, rice, fresh herbs, and a grandmother’s love.
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Press this chicken-liver mixture through a fine-mesh sieve to yield a creamy, ultrasmooth pâté.
Start at least 1 day ahead; the pâté needs to chill overnight. Try this starter alongside the rest of Chicago chef Paul Kahan’s summer cookout menu: Smoked Fish Crostini, Roasted Beets with Hazelnut Vinaigrette and Burrata, Marinated Kale and Green Bean Salad, Dilly New Potato Salad with Summer Sausage, Grilled Lamb Skewers with Carrots, Feta, and Mint, Country-Style Ribs with Quick-Pickled Waterme.…
Start at least 1 day ahead; the pâté needs to chill overnight. Try this starter alongside the rest of Chicago chef Paul Kahan’s summer cookout menu: Smoked Fish Crostini, Roasted Beets with Hazelnut Vinaigrette and Burrata, Marinated Kale and Green Bean Salad, Dilly New Potato Salad with Summer Sausage, Grilled Lamb Skewers with Carrots, Feta, and Mint, Country-Style Ribs with Quick-Pickled Waterme.…
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It took poet Kwame Alexander twelve tries to recreate his late mother’s perfectly crispy-juicy fried chicken. Luckily, he wrote down the recipe for you.
4.5
(4.48)

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Crispy on the outside and juicy on the inside, this smothered fried chicken with polenta and herb gremolata is perfect for a dinner party.
4.3
(4.33)

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Cooking the liver till just medium-rare keeps it from tasting chalky; straining it through a fine-mesh sieve gives the finished mousse a silky texture.
4.6
(4.58)

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This chicken liver crostini with pickled eggs recipe is what we'd call the perfect party appetizer. Just don't eat them all before guests arrive.
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(5)

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This one-pot dish is fallback comfort food—thick black-pepper-spiked chicken stew topped with tender, fluffy dumplings.
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This has become a Staplehouse all-star. We simplified it a bit, setting it in jars rather than the buttery pastry crust it’s served in at the restaurant. Don’t worry: We didn’t mess with the shamelessly high ratio of butter and cream to liver.

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Articles
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Cooking
This holiday side is worth doubling.
Matt Horn

Lifestyle
A certain featherless bird gets its big break in nude modeling (NSFW if your boss already thinks you're a perv)
Sam Dean

Culture
Pâté sounds intimidating—there's something about those accents. But it's really not hard to make!
Talia Lavin

Cooking
This week on the podcast, Chris and MacKenzie help a caller conquer her fear of cooking poultry.
Bon Appétit Staff & Contributors

Cooking
Bonus: You can run errands while it cooks.
Adam Rapoport

techniques
Ian Knauer writes about life on his farm. This week, tragedy at the Knauer farmstead. Upside? Delicious chicken liver sandwiches for lunch.
Ian Knauer
Videos
(323)

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Join Melissa Miranda as she makes Chicken Afritada. This tomato-based Filipino stew marries hearty vegetables, peas, and olives with tender chicken thighs. To amplify the flavors and keep the chicken skin crispy, Melissa roasts the chicken separately from the veg, reuniting them just before plating.
INGREDIENTS
For the chicken:
1 carrot, finely chopped
1 celery stalk, finely chopped
½ large yellow onion, finely chopped
1 red bell pepper, finely chopped
5 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
2 Tbsp. olive oil
4-6 skin-on, bone-in chicken thighs (about 2 lb.)
1 cup chicken stock
1 14.5-oz. can diced tomatoes
3 bay leaves
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
1 Tbsp. fish sauce
Johnny’s seasoning salt
For the roasted vegetables:
4 small carrots, roll cut
8 oz. heirloom potatoes, quartered
2 medium red bell pepper, seeded, cut into bite size pieces
½ cup olive oil
Johnny’s seasoning salt
To finish:
½ cup frozen green peas
¼ cup Castelvetrano olives, pitted
¼ cup Kalamata olives, pitted
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VIDEO BREAKDOWN
0:57 Prep soffritto
2:47 Brown chicken
3:24 Cook soffritto
3:39 Make sauce
4:44 Roast chicken at 425° until done, about 45 minutes
4:56 Prep veg for stew
5:50 Roast veg at 425°, about 10 minutes for peppers, 20 minutes for potatoes and carrots
7:48 Remove chicken
8:15 Add peas, olives
8:35 Add roasted veg, chicken to stew
8:59 Plating
9:43 Tasting

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Today on Bon Appétit, learn how to make Southern-style roast turkey with Executive Chef Marcus Woods of Sylvia’s Restaurant, NYC’s legendary soul food institution. Marcus shares his grandmother Sylvia’s timeless approach to holiday cooking–from dry brining the turkey for deep flavor to preparing a rich Southern gravy using homemade turkey stock and fried chicken oil.

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“A lot of our drinks start off as a food item... There are two to three days of preparation behind that.” Today, Bon Appétit spends a day on the line with mixologist Faye Chen, co-founder of Double Chicken Please in NYC. Named one of the world’s best bars, Double Chicken Please specializes in food-flavored cocktails that start in the kitchen.

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In this episode, the Bon Appétit kids try 100 years of chicken from the 1920s to 2010s. Try to contain yourself as the children eat and react to chicken a la King, fried chicken and waffles, chicken and dumplings, chicken tv dinner, chicken mold, chicken Marbella, chicken consomme, Burger King chicken fries, and the KFC Double Down chicken sandwich.

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Today, Bon Appétit meets chefs Lucas Sin and Eric Sze just outside Taipei to taste some of Taiwan’s best clay-oven-roasted chicken. Using a time-honored vertical spit roasting technique and only a simple salt seasoning, these chickens are slowly cooked to achieve that perfect golden crisp. The result? Juicy, flavorful chicken with irresistibly crispy skin, served whole and ready to be devoured with your hands.

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Today, one of NYC’s best Italian chefs, Angie Rito, demonstrates how she cooks the perfect chicken parmesan. As co-founder of Don Angie and San Sabino, Rito has mastered the art of Italian fine dining, but even top chefs still love the classic dishes easily made at home.
Learn more about chef Angie Rito's chicken parm dos and don't here
Learn more about chef Angie Rito's chicken parm dos and don't here