:love9:
Chicken and Sliders, my internet source says, is a French Canadian dish that originated during the depression. My Reader’s Digest cookbook calls it Chicken and Noodles. Either way, here’s how I make them.
Chicken Stock
Remnants (carcass, skin, fat, etc.) of one roasted chicken. Re-roast remnants about 40 minutes @ 400, turning after 20. Add to stock pot, fill with water, make broth by adding basil, salt, pepper, 2 onions, 4 carrots,4 garlic cloves, 4 celery stalks, 2 or 3 med. potatoes (all chopped up in large pieces). Boil for 3 or 4 hours. Strain through mesh style strainer, rinse stock pot, return stock to pot.
Sliders (Noodles)
2 lightly beaten eggs
6 tablespoons milk
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 1/2 cups flour
(can sub some or all of the broth for milk if broth is cool)
Mix eggs, milk and salt. Add flour to form a stiff dough. (I use my hands and use a touch more milk if too dry to mix) Roll out to about 1/8 inch, but I usually have most of it at 1/4 inch. Roll and slice in strips, unroll strips and cut into bite size pieces. ( I use a rolling pizza cutter to cut without rolling up the dough. Lenghtwise, then across. Just seems faster.) Here’s where I split from the recipe: recipe says let noodles stand at room temp for 2 hours to dry. *I* drop them in the bowl I mixed the dough in, and dump in about 1/8 to 1/4 cup of flour and toss so all noodles are coated well. Then whenever I'm ready (then, or 2 hours later
) I put them (and all the flour in the bowl, this thickens without an extra step) in the just boiling stock, along with bite sized carrot pieces, frozen corn, sometimes celery, and whatever chicken meat I have left. Gentle boil for 20 mins. to 1/2 hour until noodles are tenderish.
I serve this like a chicken stew, with homemade dinner rolls or a nice multi-grain bread. Recipe says noodles can be refrigerated up to 3 days, or frozen. I've made a double batch of dough, and frozen half in a lump. Yield for us is 2 dinners, and one lunch for 2 adults and 2 kids. Excellent meal for someone who is coming down with something. Mouth watering enough to interest them in eating, and nutricious.