Rotisserie chicken for dayzzz

The succulent and affordable rotisserie chicken can be eaten off the bone, chopped up for fresh salads, folded into cheesy casseroles, or shredded into simmering soups. When Boston Chicken (later Boston Market) saw success with rotisserie sales, Costco and Kroger jumped onboard and started selling whole chickens in 1994. We’ve been clucking about them ever since!

This versatile poultry is a staple for so many, and everyone seems to have a favorite way of repurposing this ubiquitous bird. I reached out to my pals asking, what’s your fav way to incorporate a rotisserie chicken into a recipe? I got so many great answers, I’m sharing them here.

When possible, there are links, and absence of links, I posted condensed explanations of the recipe. Enjoy!

  • Tlisa’s Chili Verde Soup: Combine vegetable or chicken broth, a can of white beans, cumin, garlic, chicken, and a jar of salsa verde and heat through. Serve with corn chips, onions, cilantro, etc.
  • Jessica’s Roast Chicken Soup
  • Natasha’s Instant Pot Stock: Crack the bones with pliers, slow cook for 6 hours with onion, celery, carrot, bay leaf, peppercorns and water; then pressure cook for 2 hours and strain.
  • See Natasha’s blog for a ton of other recipes using rotisserie chicken.
  • Mathue’s Mexican Lasagna:
    Ingredients: 16 oz container ricotta cheese; 16 oz sour cream or plain Greek yogurt; 1 cup salsa of your choice; 2 diced tomatoes; 1 can sliced olives; 1-2 tsp chili powder; 1-2 tsp ground cumin; 1 tsp granulated garlic[ 1 tsp granulated onion; salt and pepper;  rotisserie chicken shredded or 2-3 cooked chicken breasts shredded or cut into small cubes; shredded cheese; Tortillas cut into triangles or strips (corn or flour). Directions: Mix everything except the shredded cheese and tortillas in a bowl to combine. (The seasonings can be altered to your taste.) Spray an 8×11 glass baking dish with non-stick cooking spray. Cover the bottom with a single layer of tortillas, slightly overlapping to be sure it’s completely covered. Add half of the creamy chicken mixture and evenly spread it out. Sprinkle with shredded cheese. Another layer of tortillas to cover the cheese, then the rest of the chicken mixture, more shredded cheese. Cover with one more layer of tortillas and cover that with shredded cheese. Cover with foil and bake at 350 for about 30-40 minutes until bubbly and cheese is melted. Let it rest for about ten minutes before cutting/serving. You can add any other veggies you like to the mix, sometimes I add a can of drained/rinsed black beans. Add avocado or guacamole, salsa, cilantro.
  • Ivy’s Sesame Miso Chicken Salad
  • Sue’s Creamy Chicken over Rice: Make a white sauce using half milk or cream and half chicken stock. Add a pinch of turmeric for color. Season as desired. Thin with more milk or stock or simmer gently to thicken. Stir in chunks of cooked chicken and whatever cooked veggies are desired. Peas and chopped parsley recommended. Heat through and stir over rice.
  • Pioneer Woman’s Chicken Spaghetti (recommended by Sue!)
  • Roy’s Mole Chicken: Mole chicken. Mole from the jar, blended with water, pour over chicken in skillet, add cooked rice.
  • Aaron’s Go-To Soup (sub chicken for ham)
  • Jill’s wild rice soup
  • Jessica’s chicken divan: Make a white sauce, pour over cubed chicken, broccoli and cauliflower and bake, with more cheese on top.

Other ideas included chicken tetrazzine, enchiladas verdes, and soups — so many soups!

In the end, after Costco fairies magically deposited said chicken on my door (thank you Instacart!), we opted for enchiladas with red sauce. I also added onion, cumin, fire-roasted green chiles, several kinds of cheese, and green onion; and served it with sour cream, Spanish rice and corn.

Enjoy, fellow foodies.

Recipe: Bacon Onion Rings!

Our family’s Zoom-based cooking competition’s featured ingredient this week: sweet onions! My dad is something of an onion freak (understatement) and selected the ingredient. I LOVE onions. I put them in all kinds of things — sweet, yellow, white, raw, cooked, sautéed, caramelized, you name it. With the challenge being to cook a sweet onion dish, I pondered, Googled, and landed on this: bacon onion rings!

These are literally doubled up concentric rings of onion wrapped tightly with thick-cut slabs of bacon. Tossed with brown sugar and a few seasonings, secured with toothpicks to ensure prettiness and served plain or with any assortment of dips, you will LOVE these. The onion turns out juicy, the bacon is sweet and chewy, and your house will smell DIVINE.

My partner is used to yummy food but even he was impressed. After trying it, he said, “This food may end up being how I die.” So there!

Also, I did try making these on a rack, versus right on the pan. Nope. Not as good. You want to do these right on the pan. It will help with them getting that syrupy sweet build-up and glistening caramelization. Yum!

The family put forth some truly impressive sweet onion dishes but this won the day — because, bacon.

Bacon-Wrapped Onion Rings

Ingredients:

  • About 8 pieces of thick-cut bacon1 large Walla Walla sweet onion (WW is preferred, though other sweet onions will work) 
  • About a half-cup of  brown sugar
  • Onion powder
  • Garlic powder
  • Black or cayenne pepper
  • Salt*

Makes about 5-6 onion rings 

Directions:

  • Bring bacon out of fridge about a half hour before cooking so it is more pliable.
  • Line a large baking sheet with foil, spray with cooking oil.
  • Slice the bulb and root ends off the onion, then turn it on its side and slice into 1/2 inch thick rings.
  • For your onion ring, use two concentric rings — just one on its own won’t hold up to the long cooking time. I liked the medium-sized rings the best. The smallest are too small to thread the bacon around, and the largest will definitely use two pieces of bacon, so this is a data- and calorie-driven decision! 
  • Holding the two rings together, begin wrapping one piece of bacon around the ring. Stretch and pull as you go to maximize bacon use. You may need an additional 1/2 or a full piece of bacon to complete this. 
  • Use a long double-pointed toothpick to secure the bacon in place. This isn’t totally necessary but it will help your bacon maintain its prettiness. 
  • Once you’ve wrapped your rings…
  • Scoop your brown sugar into a shallow dish or pie pan; sprinkle with the onion and garlic powder, pepper and salt, and mixed up with a fork.
  • One at a time, press your rings into the brown sugar mix, both sides. Use your fingertips to rub the mixture around the surfaces of your rings.
  • Put the rings on your baking sheet, place in oven, and set oven to 350 degress.
  • Note: you do NOT preheat the oven. Letting the food come to heat with the oven helps the bacon warm and maintain its shape and meld together.
  • After 30 minutes, remove pan and gently and carefully flip your rings.
  • You may want to use two spatulas to hold them together as you flip. The toothpicks can also really help here because they won’t be hot! Another vote for toothpicks!
  • After 30 more minutes, remove the rings, let them cool. 
  • Plate and sprinkle with minced parsley and serve!
  • We like them with a yogurt-based blue cheese dip, but it would be good with Sriracha mayo, ranch, or any number of dippers!

Happy cooking!