What better way to wrap up the festivities than by tossing in some old school Bette-Davis-we-loved-you caker pizzazz? Reader Sara got the recipe for Glamourous Chicken from one of her nana’s church cookbooks.
I can only assume that Nana went to the Church of Hollywood because Glamourous Chicken really does live up to its name! Who cares if it’s the colour of wet concrete? The important thing is the taste and dang if this didn’t make for a moist bird. (Although the rice was a little greasy. Cooking in chicken fat might have something to do with that.)
Can’t you just picture Joan Collins eating this while riding around in her limousine, tossing wings and drumsticks at poor people?
“Eat, my destitute darlings!” she’d cry in her sophisticated British accent, rhinestone earrings shimmering in the late afternoon sunlight on Sunset Boulevard. “Eat like me!”
The one thing not glamourous about this dish? Cleaning up.
Thanks, Sara! And thanks to all of you for submitting recipes. I’m sorry I didn’t get to all of them, but rest assured, your recipe might appear very soon on the pages of this blog.
2/3 cup regular uncooked rice (see note 1)
1 package Lipton dry onion soup
1 chicken, cut into pieces
1 can cream of mushroom soup
Grease a Pyrex dish, 7 x 11 inches, and pour uncooked rice on bottom. Sprinkle dry onion soup on rice. Place chicken pieces on top. Mix 1 can of water with mushroom soup; pour over top of ingredients. Cover and bake 1 ¼ hours at 350 degrees; lift chicken at times to spread juice. (see note 2)
Note 1: Cakers, this calls for regular rice, not Minute Rice. Regular rice doesn’t come in a box and takes longer than five minutes to cook. Weird, right?
Note 2: Is it me or does the phrase “spread juice” seem dirty? Never mind. It's probably me.
Source: Caker Sara via her caker nana
I don't know about this.
ReplyDeleteCanned soup plus dry soup mix seems like sodium overload even for a Caker.
I'd think you'd have water retention issues for a week after this glamorous dish.
Tell mom to put her feet up on the sofa (that's what all that plastic is on there for after all) so her ankles don't swell. I know mine would.
Is Joan Collins really still alive?
Joan Collins is very much alive and likely running around Paris right now, throwing credit cards at Chanel store clerks and exclaiming, "I'll take it. I'll take it all!"
DeleteLift & spread?!?
ReplyDeleteYeah, there's that, too. Nothing like the ol' lift before the spread to get the imagination working in overdrive.
DeleteMr Francis!
DeleteI don't know what you are implying. I simply meant that was a lot of work & technique required for a true Caker recipe.
Harumph!
Yikes! The salt & grease on this one looks like it could drop a horse. With this type of messy cleanup I always recommend calling in the family dog. We've just about got his hypertension under control now.
ReplyDeleteDogs are awesome when it comes to cleaning plates. Who needs a dishwasher? They're also great at cleaning floors and toilets.
DeleteI guess what makes this glamorous rather than glorified is the soup mix packet.
ReplyDeleteIt's a fine line, isn't it?
DeleteI can't read this recipe. I am too mesmerized by those fancy fingernails.
ReplyDeleteI know. They're very hypnotic. In fact, if you wear them and then wave your hand in front of someone's face, you can hypnotize them. I'm speaking the truth. I got a colleague to buy me lunch yesterday.
Delete