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Not having seen what you did, I would guess a combination of both. Cooking sherry often has caramel coloring in it, which would be amplified when it deglazes the brown fond in the bottom of your pan. Maybe next time try poaching the chicken in stock. This will keep it moist as well as intensifying the chicken flavor in your stock. Then make a roux with butter and flour in a pan and use your stock and sherry in that to make the sauce for the pie.I had an excess of buttermilk and chicken stock in the house so I made a chicken pot pie. I don't like shredding chicken so I sauteed and diced it. I made the gravy in the skillet and threw in a bit of cooking sherry to give it a little zing and deglaze the pan. It tasted good but turned the gravy a bit more brown than I'm used to. Do you suppose it was the sherry or the pan scrapings that gave it that color? I liked the flavor so any thoughts on keeping sherry+scrapings but making a less-brown gravy? (Not a Les Brown gravy. I'm not that jazzy a cook.)
Is this stuff growing wild on your property?Stinging nettle pasta with lemon, cream, and sorrel with an orange and black olive salad on the side. Yummamente!
Yes, at the back of the fenced in vegetable garden. It comes back every year no matter how much I pull it out. So, if you can't beat it, eat it!Is this stuff growing wild on your property?



:drool:We made an unbelievably delicious dinner yesterday. First round was an Aperol Spritz cocktail. So refreshing. Then I grilled a pork tenderloin that I had marinated in a porchetta-style wet rub for two days, rosemary roasted smashed potatoes, and an arugula, orange, and Kalamata olive salad. Along with a tasty Vouvray. For dessert we had a rhubarb cake made with graham flour. I am glad it's grilling season again!
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