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Chicken Tagine with Apricots, Butternut Squash and Spinach
This spicy, fruity chicken stew is based on tagine, a classic North African dish that cooks meat, vegetables and fruit mostly in their natural juices. We love it because the richness of the dish comes from layers of flavor, not laborious browning. The word tagine refers to both the dish and the clay pot it typically is cooked in. The pot has a shallow pan and a conical top designed to collect condensation from the steam of the cooking food and return the moisture to it. We used a more commonly available Dutch oven, but kept to the spirit of the tagine, using a fragrant spice paste to season the chicken and act as a base for the stew. Apricots added sweetness (we preferred sulfured for their vibrant color) that was balanced by briny green olives. An equal amount of carrots can be substituted for the butternut squash. Serve the tagine with couscous, rice or warmed pita bread.
4
Servings
Don’t drain the diced tomatoes. Their liquid adds sweetness and acidity to the stew.
1 hour
30 minutes active
Ingredients
-
4
tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided
-
Kosher salt and ground black pepper
Directions
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01In a small bowl, stir together 2 tablespoons of the oil, 1¼ teaspoons salt, ½ teaspoon black pepper, the cinnamon, cumin, paprika, coriander and cayenne. In a medium bowl, toss the chicken with half the paste, rubbing the meat to coat evenly; set aside.
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GET DIGITAL & PRINTThe picture shows a tagine though the recipe calls for a large Dutch oven. Can the recipe be followed exactly while swapping out the Dutch oven for a tagine? If not, what modifications are needed? If so, what is the minimum capacity required for the tagine?
Hi Scott -
The art department took some creative license here with the photo since it doesn't technically reflect the recipe. We did not test this in a tagine for two reasons: 1.) most people don't own one; and 2.) all tagines are not created equal. Some are glazed, others are unglazed. Some are terra cotta, others are enameled cast iron. The volume of each is also all across the board. Since most Dutch ovens are similarly-sized and the different materials don't affect the cooking time and recipe results as much, we chose the Dutch oven (plus, most people have one). Feel free to try this in your tagine and let us know how it worked!
Best,
The Milk Street Team
We enjoyed this. I had to make a few substitutions —I added dried figs to the few apricots I had, and I burned the pistachios so I toasted the squash seeds for some crunch. The figs were great, while the apricots got lost in the sauce. I kept all the spices and aromatics as written. I had chicken breast — if you sub it, add with or after the squash so it stays juicy. It’s a long ingredient list, and somehow I forgot to add the spinach at the end. No doubt it will be even better with it next time.
Toast the pistachios earlier, so that when you chop them, they’re not too hot!