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Pound the chicken breasts flat with a meat mallet until they are 1/4-inch thick. Combine the flour, salt, and pepper in a pie plate. Dredge the chicken breasts in the flour mixture, making sure ...
In a medium saucepan, combine 4 cups of water with the oats, rice, cinnamon stick, 1/3 cup of the sugar and the salt; bring to a simmer. Cover and cook over low heat, stirring occasionally, until ...
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Dakjuk (Korean: 닭죽; lit. chicken porridge) is a type of Korean porridge, or juk, made with chicken. [1] While Korean food is often spicy, dakjuk is not, making it easy to digest.
Ogokbap – or five-grains rice, is a kind of Korean food made of a bowl of steamed rice mixed with grains, including barley, foxtail millet, millet and soy beans. [13] Okayu – the name for the type of congee eaten in Japan, which is less broken down than congee produced in other cultures. The water ratio is typically lower and the cooking ...
Pat chicken dry; season with Italian seasoning, salt, and pepper. Place 1/4 cup flour in a shallow dish. Dredge chicken on both sides in flour, then transfer to a plate.
Slices of chicken breast are coated in flour, briefly sautéed, and then removed from the pan, which is then used to make a Marsala reduction sauce. The sauce is made by reducing the wine to nearly the consistency of a syrup while adding garlic. The sauce is then poured over the chicken, which has been kept in a warming oven, and served ...
According to the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, lugaw is one of the earliest historically-documented dishes in the Philippines. The Vocabulario de la lengua tagala (1613) by Fr. Pedro de San Buenaventura, defines "logao" (Hispanized as "aroz guisado") as "rice mixed with [coconut] milk or water or of both (porridge)."