Creamy Pasta With Rosemary Chicken

"A delicious, creamy pasta dish that is simple to make despite the long directions. The base is thin pasta coated with a creamy garlic-butter sauce. Add to that tender chunks of chicken that have been marinated in olive oil and rosemary, then sautéed until golden. This recipe is the perfect size for 2, but can be easily multiplied to serve guests. If you multi-task well, this can be a 30 minute recipe (not including marination time) in which you begin sautéeing the chicken, then cook the sauce and boil the pasta all at the same time."
 
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Ready In:
2hrs 45mins
Ingredients:
23
Serves:
2
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ingredients

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directions

  • CHICKEN:

  • Heat the rosemary in 1/8 cup water by microwave or stove to draw out the taste.
  • Mix rosemary with 1/4 cup olive oil, and add salt and pepper.
  • Marinate the chicken slices in this rosemary-olive oil mixture for at least 1 hour, up to 24 hours. Do not rinse or drain the marinade - it's not much liquid to begin with.
  • When you're ready to prepare the meal, begin heating 1/3 inch of olive oil in a large skillet or pot.
  • Meanwhile, combine the flour, salt, pepper, and italian seasoning, and mix this in with the marinated chicken so that the pieces become slightly coated with flour. They do not need to be dry or perfectly dredged.
  • When the oil is hot, add all of the chicken pieces. They do not need to be in a single layer.
  • Sauté them on high heat, stirring them once the bottom layer becomes golden. They will not become totally golden or browned, but each piece should have golden edges and be fully cooked.
  • SAUCE:

  • Heat 1 tbs. butter and 2 tbs. olive oil in a saucepan.
  • Sauté the minced garlic until golden, not browned.
  • Stir in the flour and mix well.
  • Add in the rest of the sauce ingredients (apple juice, cream, parmesan, tomatoes, parsley).
  • Let the sauce bubble and thicken for a short time, then turn down the heat.
  • Season to taste with salt and black pepper, and garlic powder if desired.
  • If desired, you can thin and increase the sauce by adding in more cream.
  • PASTA: cook fully, according to package directions - as firm or soft as you like. Then drain the cooked pasta.
  • SERVING: when the chicken, sauce, and pasta are all cooked, mix the pasta with the sauce so that it's coated.
  • Stir in the chicken.
  • Serve with plain steamed broccoli and carrots, or any other vegetables you enjoy.

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Reviews

  1. I was searching for a way to use up some leftover chicken and modified this recipe for that. Just substituted the already cooked leftover chicken for the browned chicken in the recipe. Worked well.
     
  2. Yes, it really is simple to make and really delicious. I only made one switch and that was to use chicken broth instead of the apple juice in the sauce. (and I couldn't keep my mitts off that chicken after I browned it - yum! I love rosemary!) I used heavy cream and the pasta of choice was linquini. A great Sunday dinner along with a salad... Thanks!
     
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Tweaks

  1. Yes, it really is simple to make and really delicious. I only made one switch and that was to use chicken broth instead of the apple juice in the sauce. (and I couldn't keep my mitts off that chicken after I browned it - yum! I love rosemary!) I used heavy cream and the pasta of choice was linquini. A great Sunday dinner along with a salad... Thanks!
     

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I grew up with Lebanese and Cajun food, but only knew how to cook about 4 things when I left home for college: my dad's chicken gumbo, my mom's baked chicken, my grandmother's mahshi (stuffed grapeleaves, squash, and zucchini), and my dad's ma'mool (date or nut-filled cookies). I love to cook food for people that they enjoy, though, so the years since leaving home have been almost a quest for accumulating good recipes and trying to reproduce the delicious things I ate in childhood - the perfectly crispy kibbeh, the dainty spinach pies, the stuffed cabbage, and yeah even my mom's meatloaf! Through college, I only picked up enough recipes to satisfy myself when I really needed a taste of home. I hadn't become a creative or a good cook yet - I just had a few perfect recipes that I followed to the T. But when I got engaged to my egyptian husband, I knew that I had only a year before marriage to actually *learn to cook*. I love the idea of making a home and feeding my family delicious and nutritious food. So lo and behold, during my engagement I was living in a town where all of my friends were fabulous cooks - plus a friend of mine opened a palestinian restaurant and hired me as a chef. Through those two avenues, I actually learned cooking skills: how to season to taste, improvise when ingredients are missing, make a broth, marinate meats, raise a dough... When I finally got married, my husband was pleased with my cooking, and so was I, but only one of us knew how much effort it had taken for me to learn :) I truly feel that cooking skills have made me richer as a person. Good food is a silent language - you can communicate love and hospitality through it without a word. And that's the reward for me.
 
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