My Page
My Cookbooks
  • Main Cookbook
    Premium Members can have more than one cookbook in this list. They can keep private cookbooks just for organizing their recipes, or share them publicly with friends or the world. Learn more
My Account

Add this recipe to your:

Send this recipe:

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 (336g)

Recipe makes 6 servings

The following items or measurements are not included below:

juniper berries

pomegranate juice

Calories 741
Calories from Fat 515 (69%)
Amount Per Serving %DV
Total Fat 57.3g 88%
Saturated Fat 12.4g 62%
Monounsaturated Fat 11.6g
Polyunsaturated Fat 30.1g
Trans Fat 0.1g
Cholesterol 87mg 29%
Sodium 467mg 19%
Potassium 784mg 22%
Total Carbohydrate 35.7g 11%
Dietary Fiber 9.3g 37%
Sugars 14.8g
Protein 31.5g 63%

detailed view...

how is this calculated?

Persian Chicken

Recipe #124579 | 3 hours | 2 hours prep | add private note
greenery

By: greenery
Jun 3, 2005

This is a 16th century recipe. A friend researched it (I'm hoping she'll stop by here and add some information in the comments on how she found/changed it) because we were reading Dorothy Dunnett's Niccolo Rising novels (set in that time period) and we were curious about what the characters were eating. So we ate this along with Persian rice pilaf (see separate recipe), and it was fantastic, if a little time consuming

SERVES 6 (change servings and units)

Ingredients

Directions

  1. 1
    Wash 4 half chicken breasts (with bones and skin) and put them in a good-sized pot. Add celery rib, thyme, parsley sprigs, bay leaf, cracked peppercorns, and juniper berries.
  2. 2
    Barely cover the breasts with cold water, cover the pot, and bring to a gentle simmer (the surface of the water shakes and only a few bubbles break). Hold it there for 20 minutes; turn off the heat; let the breasts rest in the hot water for 10 minutes.
  3. 3
    Transfer chicken to a strainer. Let it rest until cool enough to handle and then cut or pull the meat into bite-sized pieces. Use the skin, bones, and broth to make stock for some other dish.
  4. 4
    Grind six or so handfuls of walnuts fine in a food processor to produce three cups. You want to end up with about three cups.
  5. 5
    Heat 5T unsalted butter in a large, heavy saucepan, and add onions, chopped fine. Cook onions until they are golden, 8 minutes or so. Add ground walnuts and stir constantly (very important) for about five minutes. They will stick if you don't stir.
  6. 6
    Add the lemon juice, salt, cinnamon, sugar, pomegranate juice, and two cups water. Cover pot and let mixture simmer for up to 40 minutes.
  7. 7
    Five minutes before you're ready to serve, add the chicken. Keep the heat low so it doesn't toughen up and cook it only until everything is heated through. Turn off the heat and let it rest if you must. It will stay hot for quite a while.

Questions about this recipe?

Spot an error in this recipe?

Browse similar recipes by category

Featured Reviews for This Recipe

From: Stacia_

On Aug 22, 2008

Delicious!

0 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • reviewer icon

    From: Chef Shadows

    On Feb 2, 2008

    I am going to try this no matter what, but I would like to see some of the documentation on this one. Edited 02/02/08: This was very good... I could not find pomegranite juice so I used grenadine syrup form the local bar supply house. Nice flavors , will make again.

    0 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • From: SugaredAlmond

    On Feb 13, 2006

    I made this for the "My three chefs" event and it was lovely. I must admit, I never like the sound of poached chicken, as I imagine it tastes really bland, so I poached chunks of chicken breast in the spiced, walnutty, pomegranatey sauce instead - which perhaps made it a bit quicker too.

    3 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • From: Chef #771010

    On Feb 21, 2008

    just wanted to let you know the name of this dish it is called: fesen joon it's a very traditional classic persian recipe, it's comfort food, traditionally you use pomegranate paste/syrup. in the north of iran it's made with less sugar, in the south, they like it sweeter.

    2 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • Read all 7 reviews

    Sister Sites: Food Network | HGTV | HGTVPro | DIY | Fine Living | Great American Country | FrontDoor.com Real Estate | Ecologue

    Comparison Shop for Kitchen Appliances & Utensils at Shopzilla & BizRate

    UpMyStreet and uSwitch.com provide UK comparison services for Energy, Home Phone, Broadband, Credit Cards, Loans, Mobile Phones and Car Insurance

    © 2008 Scripps Networks, Inc. All rights reserved