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Adobo Chicken and an Asian take on Burrata and Baby Tomatoes Recipe
by Monte Mathews

I’ve

been wanting to make this classic Filipino chicken dish forever. Especially after I went to Kalystyans (www.kalustyans.com, 123

Lexington Avenue NY NY 10016 Tel 212-685 3451) and spent an unspeakable amount

of money for a jar of Adobo seasoning.

Once I got home, I realized that Goya makes a superb version for about ¼

the price I paid for at Kalustyan’s . Ah

well. That only made me more anxious to

use my hyper-priced version. Fortunately, Food and Wine magazine arrived and in it was my longed-for recipe. Better yet,

it was from Chef Paul Qui, winner of Top Chef Season 9.

If you

watched even one episode of the show, Paul Qui was hard to miss. His amazing smile brightened the kitchen as

did everything Chef Qui made. Now back

in Austin, TX, he runs 4 kitchens and calls his empire “East Side King”. (And

you have trouble getting dinner on the table…)

Two of these are food trucks, “The Grackle” and “The Hole in the Wall”,

two are sit down restaurants called “Liberty Bar” and “Shangri-La”. The man has his hands full. But according to Food and Wine, he’s still

prepared to come home to his girlfriend / manager and cook a complete dinner at

1 am.

Now obviously at

that hour the preparation is going to have to be swift which attracted me

mightily to his recipe for Adobo Chicken.

And with it, I wanted to serve something not the least bit Filipino or

even Asian. I’d bought a couple of boules of Burrata, the intensely creamy

centered version of Mozzarella that we cannot get enough of. Somehow I’d forgotten I had it and really

wanted to eat it that very night. So I

worked up an Asian dressing, added it to my familiar Burrata and tomato mixture

and I had a hit on my hands. However,

my adobo seasoning was gilding the lily, or in this case, the chicken.

Adobo, the seasoning.

The word “Adobo”

comes from the Spanish adobar, which

literally means “to marinate”. In Latin

America and the Caribbean, it is an all-purpose seasoning made up of garlic,

oregano, black pepper and turmeric.

Other spices can be added and often are depending on which region the

adobo finds itself in. However, when

you get to the Philippines, ruled as it was for 400 years by Spain, the name

Adobo refers to the dish itself, not just the seasoning. It means any meat or fish that’s been

marinated in garlic, soy sauce, and vinegar.

That still left me with an entire jar of Abobo, the seasoning. So I used it just as I would have in Latin

America or the Caribbean. I rubbed the

uncooked chicken with it. The deep

flavors permeated the meat and the skin, adding to the rich broth the chicken

cooks in. And Adobo wasn’t my only

discovery this go round. Paul Qui’s

recipe called for Coconut Vinegar. Lo

and behold, I found a bottle of it at Whole Foods.

It’s made from the sap of the Coconut Tree. While I can’t say there’s a huge coconut

flavor attached to the vinegar, it is sharper than cider vinegar. Its package

claims its more nutritious, gluten-free and “an abundant source of 17 amino

acids, minerals, vitamin C and B vitamins”.

Since the recipe only contains all of a ¼ cup plus two tablespoons of the

stuff, you may be forgiven for using good old apple cider vinegar instead. There’s not a lot of time involved here.

Only an hour, half of which is watching the chicken stew away in the oven. That’s plenty of time to make the Burrata and Tomato Salad.

One of the great

strides in winter vegetables has to be the number of excellent mini tomato

varieties that crowd the produce section of the market. Whether grape tomatoes, or cherry tomatoes,

or something called mini heirlooms, there’s no excuse for not enjoying the

incomparable flavor of tomatoes year round.

quarters depending on size.

Toss in

Asian vinaigrette. Plate tomatoes.

Divide Burrata evenly and top tomatoes with it.

Sprinkle Sea Salt over Tomatoes and Burrata. (I used Black Hawaiian sea

salt.