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An Ancient Photo Post I did for Chicken Dumplings

Posted on 2/1/23 at 4:55 pm
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14160 posts
Posted on 2/1/23 at 4:55 pm
During an FBI search of my archives to see if they contained any Classified materials, they discovered one of the first photo posts I offered on F&D. Since there was a lot of interest recently, I thought I would bring this post back, so here it is. I am suspicious th material was first posted around 2010, when we were still living in Meridian.


Chicken and Dumplings



Start with a suitable pot, a 6-pound hen (cut up), three sticks of celery, a medium/large onion (halved) and two carrots (scrubbed):



Everything goes into the pot, plus a half Tablespoon of kosher salt, the same amount of black pepper and three quarts of water. The veggies are added to give flavor to the broth and will be removed later, replaced with chopped celery and onion.



This a six-pound hen, which will need to be cooked at a low boil with a lid for at least two or three hours to get tender. By this time, the broth will be nice. That is what you want because this dish demands a good broth.



Actually, I added a chicken cube to provide a little more salt and flavor to the broth after removing the vegetables and chicken parts and tasting for flavor and saltiness.



To keep this shorter, I won't show straining the broth, but you need to strain it and then add 1/2 of an onion and two stalks of celery (chopped) and cook them in the broth until they are soft.





While the chicken is cooling and the vegetables are cooking in the broth you will make the dumplings. You need to remember; pie crust is made with cold water. Dumplings are made with hot broth - as hot as you can stand. You'll need 5 cups of self rising flour, 1/3 cup of shortening and 3 cups of hot chicken broth.



Add the shortening to the flour and mix well.



Add the 3 cups of strained hot broth and mix



Until incorporated as shown here





Then turned out on a floured surface. The wife uses a full sheet pan to keep all under control and the flour mess to a minimum.


You can do it all at once, or in two batches the way she did. After turning it out onto the floured surface, shape it and allow it to rest for a few minutes. Then shape it into a loaf so you can roll it out:



Hopefully the vegetables will be soft by now and the chicken cooled enough to pull from the bones.



You will also need to mix your thickener, which is 3 Tablespoons of self rising flour and 3 Tablespoons of butter



Mixed well





and set aside for later



Back to the dumplings. Roll them out 1/8 inch thick and cut into 2 inch X 3 inch strips or whatever you like.



When the vegetables are soft and the broth is at a full boil,



begin adding the dumplings.



You do not stir the dumplings!!!! Use a spoon to gently push them under the broth surface, but do not stir them as they are easily broken apart until they get done. They will quickly swell and get thicker as you add them. The broth will also begin to cloud up and thicken.





When all have been added, turn heat as low as possible (or off) and cover the pot.



Allow the heat to complete the cooking for 5-10 minutes. After about 5 minutes taste one. You'll know if they are done or if the second five minute rest is needed to complete the cooking. At this point too much heat will burn (scorch) the dumplings, so be careful. Stirring is still a no-no and too much heat will cause them to stick and burn. When the dumplings are done, check the liquid for thickness. This is a personal preference. Some like the broth thin and some like it thick. The broth is always thick and creamy at our house. To get it that way, we add 1 cup of milk.



and the butter and flour thickener we made earlier:



then very gently stir it in and watch the dish meld into a creamy thick saucy delight. Ready to add the chicken and fold gently until it is incorporated



I like lots of black pepper and add a teaspoon or two more of fresh ground black pepper at the very end:





Then ladle a generous serving into a bowl.





Time to enjoy:




REHEATING:

Your leftover dumplings will suck up all of the available liquid while stored in the refrigerator (they will not freeze). They will keep a couple of days under refrigeration. To reheat, add some canned chicken broth and microwave.

Thanks for looking at my post.
Posted by SUB
Member since Jan 2001
Member since Jan 2009
20771 posts
Posted on 2/1/23 at 4:58 pm to
MD, your recipe threads are always top notch. Thanks for sharing!
Posted by Walkerdog14
Member since Dec 2014
1213 posts
Posted on 2/1/23 at 6:20 pm to
Yes they are, now I’m hungry!
Posted by BigDropper
Member since Jul 2009
7614 posts
Posted on 2/1/23 at 8:00 pm to
Too bad you don't do videos, you'd have one hell of a YouTube channel.
Posted by jfw3535
South of Bunkie
Member since Mar 2008
4644 posts
Posted on 2/1/23 at 8:58 pm to
Bookmarked. Looks great MD. Will be making soon. I've been having a serious craving for some chick dump.
Posted by Twenty 49
Shreveport
Member since Jun 2014
18732 posts
Posted on 2/2/23 at 4:49 am to
When you first posted that, I put the info in a written recipe format.

Chicken & Dumplings
Meridian Dog

Makes 12 large servings

Ingredients:

6 lb. hen, large chicken, or equivalent bone-in chicken parts
Optional: chicken bouillon cube or Better than Bouillon

5 stalks of celery
2 onions
2 whole carrots, peeled or scrubbed clean

water
kosher salt
black pepper

5+ cups self rising flour
1/3 cup Crisco shortening

3 tablespoons of butter
1 cup milk

The Stock

In a large pot, put the hen or chicken (cut up), three sticks of celery, onion, two carrots, (dice or rough chop the veg) half tablespoon of kosher salt, half tablespoon of black pepper, and three quarts of water.

A six pound hen will need to be cooked at a low boil with a lid for at least two or three hours to get tender. This dish demands a good chicken stock.

Remove chicken, strain the stock, and return strained stock to the pot. A chicken bouillon cube or Better Than Bouillon can be added to the pot if you like to help provide a little more salt and flavor to the stock after removing the vegetables and chicken and tasting for flavor and saltiness.

Add 1/2 of an onion (diced) and two stalks of celery (diced) and simmer them in the broth until they are soft. While the chicken is cooling and the vegetables are cooking in the broth (which is kept hot until the dish is finished) you will make the dumplings.

After the chicken cools a bit, pull the meat from the bones and separate into small pieces.

The Dumplings

Dumplings are made with hot broth—as hot as you can stand. Add 1/3 cup of shortening to 5 cups flour and mix well, until crumbly. Using your fingers is fine.

Add 3 cups of the strained hot broth and mix until incorporated. This makes a damp dough. A little flour can be added if needed, to dry the dough up a little and make it easier to handle.

Turn out the dough onto a floured surface. Can use a sheet pan as a work area. Work the dough at once or in portions, whichever is easier, and shape it into a loaf. Allow dough to rest for a few minutes.

While the dough rests, make a beurre manié from 3 tablespoons of flour and 3 tablespoons of softened butter. Set aside.

Roll dough out 1/8" thick and cut into 1" x 3" strips or the size you prefer.

By now, the vegetables in the stock should be soft. Bring the stock to a full boil. Begin gently adding the dumplings one or two at a time.

Do not stir the dumplings! Use a spoon to gently push them under the surface. They are easily broken apart before they are done.

The dumplings will swell and thicken. The stock will begin to cloud up and thicken.

When all dumplings have been added, reduce heat to as low as possible (or off if using a heavy pot that retains heat well) and cover the pot. Allow gentle heat to complete the cooking for 5-10 minutes. Too much heat will make the dumplings stick or scorch.

Taste a dumpling after about 5 minutes. You’ll know if it is done or if another five minute rest is needed to complete the cooking. Do not stir.

When the dumplings are done, check the liquid for thickness. This is a personal preference. Some like it thin and some like it thick. To make it thick and creamy, gently stir in 1 cup of milk and the beurre manié thickener.

Gently fold the pulled chicken into the dumplings.

Add a teaspoon or two of fresh cracked black pepper.

Serve in a bowl or on a plate, depending on thickness.

REHEATING: Dumplings do not freeze well. You will be disappointed if you try. Leftover dumplings can be refrigerated for a couple of days, but they will suck up the available liquid while stored. To reheat, add water, milk or chicken broth and microwave until warm enough to eat.
Posted by Pirate0714
Baton Rouge
Member since May 2016
426 posts
Posted on 2/2/23 at 9:13 am to
I saw the post about this yesterday and had my wife make a quick one with the frozen dumplings at rouses. It was good, but sir yours looks amazing! Thank you for reposting the recipe.
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14160 posts
Posted on 2/2/23 at 1:50 pm to
Thanks Twenty-49.

Mr Pirate. We have made them with the frozen dumplings from the grocery and they were good. This method makes a thicker, more tender dumpling. Either way makes a good batch of satisying dumplings.

BigD - I think you need a sticht (sp?) to do YouTube and the only thing I've got going is Old Fart, which probably wouldn't video well.
This post was edited on 2/2/23 at 1:55 pm
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
81604 posts
Posted on 2/2/23 at 2:13 pm to
I prefer this type of dumpling over the biscuit kind. Looks absolutely awesome.
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