This article was originally featured in The 30 Second Wine Advisor's FoodLetter on Thursday, Feb. 16, 2006.

Memories from Portugal

Galinha Estufada

INGREDIENTS: (Serves two)

1 medium sweet yellow or white onion
2 cloves garlic
2 tablespoons olive oil
14.5-ounce (411g) can whole peeled tomatoes
1 bay leaf
1/2 tablespoon (8g) paprika
1/2 cup dry white wine
1 cut-up frying hen or 6-8 chicken thighs or other parts
3 cups water
1 cup rice
Salt
Black pepper
1/2 cup fresh shelled or frozen peas
1 tablespoon chopped parsley

PROCEDURE:

1. Peel and chop the onions; peel and mince the garlic. Put both with the oil in a heavy, deep skillet or dutch oven and cook over medium heat until the vegetables are translucent and aromatic, five minutes or so.

2. Open the tomatoes and chop them coarsely (or use fresh tomatoes in season, peeled, seeded and chopped). Put the tomatoes with all their juice, the bay leaf and paprika in with the onions and garlic. Cover the pan tightly, reduce heat to low, and simmer for another 5 or 10 minutes.

3. Pour in the wine - Vinho Verde would be ethnically appropriate, but any dry white will do. Turn heat back up to medium-high, simmer for a moment or two, then put in the chicken pieces and the water. (Skin the chicken pieces If you're concerned about the fat, but frankly, leaving it on makes for a richer-textured finished dish.) Bring back to a boil, then re-cover, turn heat back to low and simmer for 20 minutes.

4. Stir in the rice and add salt and pepper to taste. Cover, simmer for another 20 minutes or until the rice is just cooked. Stir in the peas and the chopped parsley, cover, and simmer for 5 minutes more. The rice should absorb all the liquid, and the chicken should be falling off the bone.

VARIATIONS: Ortins suggests making an alternate version of this dish with four medium potatoes, peeled and quartered, in place of the rice and peas, otherwise following the same instructions. Actually, I learned to my pleased surprise that cooks in Portugal, who clearly never heard of Atkins, often serve both rice and potatoes in the same meal, and that should work, too.

Ortins also notes that, for those who like crispy chicken, you can take the chicken pieces out before adding the rice or potatoes to the pot, then crisp the chicken in a 350F (175C) oven while the rice cooks on the stovetop, bringing the meat and the rest of the dish back together on a serving platter.

WINE MATCH: This dish would work well with either an aromatic white or a light, fruity but acidic red. A Vinho Verde or an Alentejo red from Portugal would be perfect, although it made a mighty fine cross-Latin match with a particularly pleasant red from Northern Italy's Lombardia, the Villa 2001 "Gradoni" Terre di Franciacorta recently featured in California Wine Club's International Selections.

BUY THE BOOK ONLINE:
Now that I've spattered a little tomato sauce and smeared a little garlic on the library book, I'm inclined to buy my own. Ana Patuleia Ortins's "Portuguese Homestyle Cooking" is available from Amazon.com in paperback for $15.72, a 37 percent discount. Purchases made using this exact link,
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1566564085/robingarrswineloA/
will return a small commission to us at WineLoversPage.com.

Amazon is also currently offering the hardcover version through associated used-book vendors, but the only one currently available is offered for $78.90. I don't think so. You may also be able to buy it direct from Ms. Ortins' Website,
http://www.portuguesecooking.com/

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