Lemonade – salabat chicken
November 19, 2009 • Hello. I am currently out of the country and unable to respond to comments and e-mails. Rest assured, however, that future posts have been scheduled so new recipes will go live almost everyday during my absence. I'll be back soon with lots of stories and photos. Ciao for now! ~ ConnieIf the name of the recipe sounds strange, that’s because this is a rather strange, and wickedly flavorful, dish. My 11-year-old wanted chicken with sweet and sour sauce for lunch but we did not have the vegetables to go with the dish. Besides, I wasn’t so sure if chunks of chicken would be good for a stir-fried dish. Braising (cooking with very little liquid) the chicken was a better idea. The challenge was to come up with a sauce with a sweet-tangy flavor that would be good for braising the chicken. My first thought was to use kalamansi (native citrus) juice and minced ginger but we did not have enough kalamansi in the fridge. No ginger either. Then I saw the jar of powdered lemonade that someone forgot to put back in its proper place in the beverage cart. I checked if we had powdered salabat and we did. For an oriental twist, I decided I would add some chili-garlic sauce and hoisin sauce.

Note that I used what I had in the kitchen. There’s no earthly reason why you can’t use fresh lemon juice and ginger with some honey or brown sugar instead of powdered lemonade and salabat. In fact, adding some grated lemon zest to the chicken while it cooks sounds like a really good idea. It is the combination of citrus and ginger that gives the dish its piquant flavor and aroma.
Chili-garlic sauce and hoisin sauce are available in the oriental section of most supermarkets.
Comments
2 Responses to “Lemonade – salabat chicken”If you want your own pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!
Stay updated!
View the archive
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| « Oct | ||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
| 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 |
| 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 |
| 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 |
| 29 | 30 | |||||
Ham & Peas Tripolina
Beef with sate babi sauce
Fish fillets and togue (mung bean sprouts) stir fry
Herb crusted roast pork loin with baby asparagus
White chocolate and blueberry mini cheesecakes
Appetizers
Asian
Birthdays & Parties
breakfast club
cakes
cheese
Chinese
chocolate
Christmas & New Year
Cooking for one
Daddy cooks!
Filipino
Italian Job
muffins & cupcakes
omelet
pasta
salads
School lunchbox
spring rolls
Superb soups
Conversations
- sheric on 'Cheese, tomato and basil toasties': Hi Ms. Connie, like it very much…yummy, i also try...
- Camille on 'Maja Maiz': Hi Ms. Connie… I really like your website I always visit it everytime na...
- ana on 'Buttery cupcakes': thank you, miss connie… this is really a big help..
- ana on 'Buttery cupcakes': hi miss connie… i love your recipes. they are just easy to follow, esp for...
- lemon on 'Make your own fish (and chicken) nuggets': ahaha. Perfect trick for a daughter who loves...
This recipie sounds great. I just wanted to confirm though that you are using pre-sweetened lemonade powder and not unsweetened. 3 tbsp would be quite a bit of unsweetened, and would make the recipie very tart. But since I’ve never cooked with powder, I’m not certain.
Sweetend, Andrew.