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Recipe: Chicken with Shallot-Apricot Sauce

2008_03_25-ShallotsChicken.jpgWe love fruit flavors and shallots sautéed up together. You know what else we love? Easy dishes that take very little time and effort to put together. Behold — the best of both worlds. Our dad taught us this dish, although we've forgotten a lot of his instruction and gone our own way over time. (Isn't that always the case...)

 
 

This would be a great recipe to use up leftover jam — perhaps from making hamantaschen — and we've used raspberry jam in lieu of apricot many times. We also frequently make this sauce for pork tenderloin.

The oniony shallots with the fruit is one of our favorite combinations, and we add an extra layer of flavor by de-glazing the chicken skillet and pouring some pan juices over the meat before we add the shallots.

Chicken with Shallot-Apricot Sauce
serves 4

For the chicken:
4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
salt and pepper
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/4 cup chicken broth

For the sauce:
1 tablespoon olive oil
5 medium shallots, peeled and sliced thin
1/2 cup chicken broth
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
2 heaping tablespoons apricot jam or preserves
salt and pepper

Season each chicken breast with salt and pepper on both sides. Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a large sauté pan over high heat. Cook the chicken breasts for about 3-4 minutes on each side, until they develop a golden brown crust. Cover the pan, reduce the heat to low, and cook for about 5 more minutes, or until the chicken is just cooked through.

When the chicken is finished cooking, remove from the pan, set on a plate, and cover with foil to keep warm. Return the heat to high and add the 1/4 cup of chicken broth, de-glazing the pan and scraping the brown bits from the bottom.

While the chicken is cooking, prepare the sauce. Heat 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a medium to large sauté pan over medium heat. Add the shallots, season with salt and pepper, and cook for about 5 minutes, until they begin to get soft and the bottom of the pan begins to brown.

Add the 1/2 cup chicken broth to the shallots, scraping the brown bits off the bottom of the pan while the broth reduces. Add the balsamic vinegar, reduce the heat to medium-low, and cook for about 5 more minutes. Add the apricot jam and stir to combine. The sauce will thicken but should still be easily stirred.

To serve, slice the chicken, drizzle with the pan juices, and top with the shallot-apricot mixture.

Helpful link:
How to Cook Moist and Tender Chicken Breasts


(Image: Elizabeth Passarella)

Tags

Main Dish, Meat, Easy, apricot, chicken, shallot

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Comments (12)

sounds yummy and easy! gotta try it. the shallot sauce -- is it 1/4c or 1/2 c broth?

posted by selena on 2008-03-25 15:53:29
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It's 1/2 cup in the sauce (1/4 cup to de-glaze the chicken pan) Fixed! Thanks, Selena!

posted by Elizabeth P on 2008-03-25 16:12:46
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This sounds wonderful. I'm thinking it might be really good on pork, too. Of course I usually just end up putting most homemade sauces and condiments on a spoon! ; )

posted by Farmgirl Susan on 2008-03-25 16:30:07
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Your dad must be a great cook!

posted by art on 2008-03-25 16:41:15
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Divine - my husband just went back for seconds. He loves the 'gravy' as he calls it. - no gourmet him but I try. I could easily see it with pork. This will be one of my favorite go-to recipes to enhance chicken which can be ho-hum when prepared too often. I was going to prepare Chicken Piccata tonight when I came across this recipe. Cheers - and thanks for making a memorable meal.

posted by judy0044 on 2008-03-25 18:24:45
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yum. never met a carmelized onion or shallot I couldn't love.
this sounds like it would be great on crostini for an app, too.
Maybe with a little schmear of goat cheese?

posted by splatgirl on 2008-03-26 09:54:10
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Is there any way to make this in 1 pan? I'd sure hate to dirty 2 pans for a simple meal. Maybe cook the shallots in the same pan that was used for the chicken?

posted by SnorkelVik on 2008-03-26 13:03:12
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SnorkelVik - You could certainly make this in one pan. I'd make the chicken, deglaze the pan, pour off the pan juices, and then just add a bit more olive oil and start the shallots. The chicken should stay warm enough while the shallots cook- they don't take long.

Farmgirl Susan and Judy0044 - Yes yes yes to pork! I make this sauce with pork tenderloin all the time.

posted by Elizabeth P on 2008-03-26 13:49:30
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I made this last night with a combination of onions and garlic instead of shallots, and also raspberry-cranberry jam instead of apricot preserves and it was awesome. Gotta love using what you've got!

posted by nongsa on 2008-03-27 12:27:28
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We had this last night. Very good. Thank you.

posted by katstrode on 2008-03-31 11:39:53
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My girlfriend and I made this the other night, really amazing and simple to make. We rubbed the chicken with a little Ras Al Hanout, its sweet/spicy taste really complimented the apricot/shallots sauce. Thanks Kitchn!

posted by David Michael on 2008-04-14 12:59:20
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Coming back to say that this is in our regular rotation now. It has a slightly different taste or bite every time -- but always delicious!

posted by selena on 2008-05-01 21:28:38
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