The Denver Post

One-pot Creamy Chicken and Noodles

- By Clare De Boer

Sometimes, delicious is obvious. You can’t miss the charred curds on tandoori chicken, the crisp edges on a lasagna, the ripe flesh of a peach. But what draws us to a bowl of rice cooked in coconut milk? Or bread pudding?

Desirabili­ty can be harder to spot when it’s one thing absorbing another. But it’s these saturation points — where an ingredient that gives meets one that takes — that comfort. We fold warm, peeled potatoes through mayonnaise, sauce our noodles in the pan and unravel over a potpie with a squidgy layer of puff pastry soaked with what’s below.

Food that’s long on this sort of satisfacti­on isn’t technical. In fact, while being a profession­al chef has given me technical ability, it’s a loyalty to my appetite that makes the food. My role at home — like any cook — is facilitato­r, here to provide the conditions that draw flavor and juices out of one ingredient to hand off to the next.

This recipe for chicken cooked with noodles is the opposite of flashy or groundbrea­king.

Skimming the ingredient list, you could mistake it for chicken Alfredo. But too often chicken Alfredo is a wasted opportunit­y. Seared, sliced chicken breast and creamy pasta are combined only at the time of serving — a romance without rapport — but in this recipe, the two ingredient­s are layered in one pot with plenty of water to make something deeper, lighter and intuitive.

There are many ways to let chicken and noodles have at it: You can boil the bird and cook noodles in the resulting stock. You can braise the chicken to make a more concentrat­ed sauce, which is delicious over buttered noodles.

This recipe splits the difference. It begins by roasting a whole, butter-rubbed, Parmesanri­nd-stuffed chicken and a head of garlic under high heat. The skin and butter brown, the garlic sweetens, the bird infuses with the nutty flavors of the cheese. The pot is deglazed with water, less than you would use in a soup, but more than for a braise. Then, the noodles cook in the same pot so they can take in all that flavored broth. In a final act of generosity, the noodles share their starches with the broth, thickening it into a sauce.

Good things happen when ingredient­s are given a warm introducti­on and a chance to know one another.

Think of this warming dish as a relay race, each ingredient handing its flavor to the next. During the (almost!) hands-off cooking, a head of garlic and a whole chicken stuffed with a Parmesan rind roast, then give themselves to salted water, which in turn flavors the egg noodles that soften around the bird. Salt and water are your best tools here: Season the chicken, season the water and season both again. Don’t hesitate to add more water as the noodles are cooking to make sure they’re submerged. Every brand will absorb a slightly different amount of liquid, and you want a result that’s splashy enough to take on all the Parmesan you will grate at the table. Use your largest pot so everything fits. A 7- to 9-quart Dutch oven has ideal proportion­s with its wide base and chicken-height sides. You can substitute any short, quick-cooking pasta for egg noodles, and introduce sauteed mushrooms, spinach or herbs at the end, if that’s your mood. — Clare de Boer Yield: 4to 6servings. Total time: 2 hours.

INGREDIENT­S

1 whole chicken (3 to 4 pounds)

 ?? MATT TAYLOR-GROSS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? One-pot creamy chicken and noodles. Both the bird and the egg noodles cook in the same vessel for a creamy meal that’s not just warming, it’s also so easy to clean up.
MATT TAYLOR-GROSS — THE NEW YORK TIMES One-pot creamy chicken and noodles. Both the bird and the egg noodles cook in the same vessel for a creamy meal that’s not just warming, it’s also so easy to clean up.

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