I have a love/hate relationship with my slow cooker. I love the convenience of being able to just set and forget a meal. I hate the fact that much of what comes out of it tastes much like anything else that comes out of it, and the fact that much of what comes out is not visually appealing. Did that make sense? Probably not. In any case, it seems I can get a slow cooker dish to TASTE good, but not to LOOK good. This one is no exception. It also requires a little stovetop work as well, which is usually a deal breaker for me. I just didn't think throwing raw onion would work here, though. That said, this dish smelled AMAZING and tasted really good. If it's not garlicky enough, throw some garlic powder in there. Go nuts. This is a pretty forgiving recipe. Some of you nicer people said it looked fine, but to me it looks like it was shaken out of a diaper. And with that ringing endorsement, enjoy. As always, notes are in (blue.)
Slow Cooker Chicken and Potatoes in Garlic Cream Sauce |
Ingredients
- 6 potatoes (about 2 pounds), cleaned and quartered. (use whatever potatoes you want. We went with plain old russets. If you want to peel them, feel free. We generally don't.)
- 2 lbs boneless, skinless chicken breasts
- 1 can (14.5 ounce) cream of broccoli soup
- 1 envelope (1.2 ounce) Herb/Garlic soup mix
- 1 block (8 ounce) cream cheese, softened (we use neufchatel to keep the fat down)
- 1 onion, finely chopped
- 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
- 1 teaspoon hot sauce of choice (or red pepper flakes. Or nothing if you're a big baby.)
- Olive oil
- Smoked paprika
- Salt and pepper
- In a pan, heat a couple tablespoons of olive oil to medium-high heat. Add the onions and cook until they turn golden.
- In a bowl, add the onions, cream cheese, soup, soup mix, Worcestershire and hot sauces. Whisk until the cream cheese is completely incorporated.
- Rub the chicken with some paprika and salt and pepper.
- In a 5 quart slow cooker, put in the potatoes first. Then lay the chicken breasts on top of that. Pour the sauce over the chicken.
- Cook on HIGH for about 4-1/2 hours. If you do LOW, probably go with 7-8 hours.
- Keep an eye on it. You're wanting the potatoes to be done and the chicken cooked through. If it looks like it's starting to dry out at the halfway point, add a splash of water (or chicken stock, or even dry white wine if you're feeling rowdy.)
- Give everything a gentle stir at the end to make sure the sauce is covering everything before serving.
Good Times! |
No comments:
Post a Comment