• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Eatentions

Organic * Local * Sustainable

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Recipes
  • Culinary Socials
  • CSM – Community Sourced Meals
  • Contact
  • Nav Social Menu

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • RSS
    • Snapchat
    • Twitter

Meat and Poultry

Baked Crispy Chicken Thighs

February 19, 2015 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

Baked Crispy Chicken Thighs 1

You know those weekdays when it just seems daunting to THINK about cooking a meal much less actually doing it? Yep, I thought so…..

We cook a whole chicken almost weekly but it takes a while and some nights we aren’t home until later but I still find myself craving that roasted chicken….it’s such a great comfort food.

My solution on those late weeknights and cravings….baked crispy chicken thighs! They are my favorite part of the chicken because of the flavor and ANY time of year they sound delicious. They cook relatively quickly and if I just have time for a salad to accompany, that works out but if I can, I like to roast some baby potatoes along side……the cool thing about chicken is you can pair almost anything for a side that sounds yummy to you so, go big!

This baked crispy chicken thigh dish is adapted from my whole roasted chicken recipe but you can change up the herbs and use thyme, rosemary, or tarragon, they are ALL good.

I hope this recipe works for you on those weekdays when you feel daunted or even when you don’t, I promise, it’s delish!

Baked Crispy Chicken Thighs 3

Baked Crispy Chicken Thighs
 
Print
Prep time
5 mins
Cook time
40 mins
Total time
45 mins
 
This is a PERFECT quick, easy, and delicious weeknight dinner! Serve with potatoes and a salad!
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Entree
Cuisine: American
Serves: 8
Ingredients
  • 8 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
  • Fresh parsley
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 lemon, cut into 8 rounds
Instructions
  1. Position a rack in the lower third of an oven and preheat to 400°F
  2. Season the chicken thighs on both sides with salt and pepper. Tuck a few leaves of parsley and a sliver of butter under the chicken skin.
  3. Heat the tablespoon of butter in a large ovenproof skillet or fry pan over medium-high heat. Add the chicken, skin side down, and cook until the fat has rendered and the skin is crisp and golden brown, about 10 minutes. Transfer, skin side up, to a plate.
  4. Pour off the excess fat from the pan. Return the chicken, skin side up, to the pan and scatter the lemon slices on top. Transfer to the oven and roast until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of a thigh, away from the bone, registers 170°F (77°C), 25-30 minutes.
  5. Scatter an additional 2-3 tablespoons of fresh herbs on top. Let rest for 5 minutes before serving.
3.2.2929

IMG_5749

IMG_5753

Filed Under: Meat and Poultry, Uncategorized Tagged With: baked, Butter, chicken, chicken thighs, crispy, herbs, lemon, parsley, roast, rosemary, tarragon, thyme

Greek Lamb Shanks

February 13, 2015 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

Greek-Lamb-Shanks-with-Cipollini-and-Potatoes

Greek-Lamb-Shanks-with-Cipollini-and-Potatoes

Whenever I ask Enrique what special meal he wants on a Sunday, 9 times out of 10 he asks for this recipe. It really is quite the marriage of flavors and couple that with “fall off the bone tenderness” and you truly have a magical experience.

Since I know how often the request for this recipe is coming, I always have some shanks in my freezer. I have an awesome local source that makes this dish that much more amazing; gotta love these farmers and purveyors!

Another special element that highlights this dish is when I remember all the amazing lamb dishes we have had when we travel. I could eat lamb everyday and in everyway but infused with lemon, white wine, and fresh herbs is probably one of my most favorite preparations. I think for both of us, some of this fondness comes from our 8th anniversary spent in Greece.

We were on the Island of Santorini for 1 of the 2 weeks we spent in this amazing country. If you haven’t been to Santorini, you need to put it on your bucket list immediately! If you have been to Santorini, you already know how completely enchanting this island is so you won’t be surprised that we had a delightful anniversary dinner in a small, local restaurant on the second floor with our own balcony overlooking the sea. I probably could have been fed rocks and dirt and been in bliss completely due to the ambience…. but top it off with a delicious Grecian dinner and I think we probably were transported to Heaven’s main gate; in fact, I am positive we were.

The evening began with 2 appetizers of various fresh fishes, simply prepared both fried and grilled and combined with fresh herbs and local olive oil. Next was a simple salad topped with grilled Mediterranean vegetables and fresh lemon juice. I couldn’t have imagined anything could get better until they served us the lamb shank prepared in the outside wood burning oven with herbs, white wine, lemon, and olive oil. It was succulent, rich, and decadent. Dessert was fresh fruit and local cheeses. Simply divine and one of the best anniversary dinners we ever had…..

So this recipe is my interpretation of that memorable lamb dish overlooking the sea in Santorini…..try this for Valentine’s Day and transport yourself….

Greek-Lamb-Shanks-with-Cipollini-and-Potatoes

Greek-Lamb-Shanks-with-Cipollini-and-Potatoes

 

Greek Lamb Shanks
 
Print
Prep time
30 mins
Cook time
3 hours 45 mins
Total time
4 hours 15 mins
 
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Main
Cuisine: Greek
Serves: 4
Ingredients
  • 4 Lamb Shanks (each about 1¼ lbs., 1 shank is a portion)
  • Parsley Leaves, lightly packed
  • 4 T Dried Oregano
  • 8 Garlic Cloves, minced
  • 4 Lemons, juiced
  • Olive Oil
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 1 Cup White Wine
  • Chicken Stock
  • 1 lb. Small Potatoes
  • 12 Cippolini Onions or 4 Sweet Onions, quartered
Instructions
  1. Squeeze lemon should be about ½ cup total
  2. In a food processor, add ½ garlic, 2 T oregano, bunch of parsley and a little oil, blend together. Rub lamb shanks with mixture, set aside.
  3. In same food processor, repeat process above. In a bowl, add onion and potatoes and toss with mixture. Add salt and pepper and set aside.
  4. Heat oven to 375
  5. Heat dutch oven and salt and pepper the shanks and then brown all over med-high heat. Add lemon juice and white wine, reduce by half.
  6. Add back shanks and add chicken broth until ½ way up sides of meat and add bay leaf. Put in oven for 1½ hours. After 1½ hours, reduce oven to 350 for another 30 minutes.
  7. Remove shanks from oven and pull out of dutch oven. Add potato onion, juices, salt, and pepper. Add back shanks and more chicken broth, if needed. Reduce heat to 325 and cook for another 1½ hours.
  8. Serve with naan and a greek salad
3.2.2885

Filed Under: Meat and Poultry Tagged With: Chicken Broth, cipollini, greek, lamb, lamb shanks, lemon, onions, potatoes, White Wine

Filet Mignon with Bagna Cauda Butter, Sauteed Marsala Mushrooms and Sliced Baked Potatoes

January 22, 2015 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

Rachie steak 1

What makes the perfect steak? Is it the accompaniments or the preparation? Is it both? Is it using a classic preparation or an innovative one?

So much to ponder…..the perfect steak. I have completely shied away from this simple yet not easy skill. For me it’s a classic preparation with innovative accompaniments. I would call this is the perfect steak or shall I say the perfect steak meal.

So why the resistance? Ummmmmm well, I am not a “grill-girl” nor do I have the perfect gas stove and oven to create the optimal cooking environment. But that is true of any of the dishes I create in my kitchen and I don’t resist them so why the “all American signature dish?”

It came clear, I was intimidated because I didn’t trust my ability to “hone in” and make it all come together, to put aside the chatter and just take the information I researched and go down into my inner chef and let her rock and roll!

It was my husband’s birthday weekend and I couldn’t think of a more perfect time. It’s in January, right after the holidays, cold and dark outside but a perfect evening for a steak palapolozza even though it is just the 2 of us….perfect time for a coming out party!

This year his birthday was on a Saturday so I had plenty of time to shop and prepare. First, I went to the butcher for the perfect cut of filet minion, 2 – 8 ounces of sheer bliss…..From there, off to my local sources for the accompaniments of potatoes, green beans, and wild mushrooms. Oh, I can’t forget the wine, my God no its my right hand to get me through this…….so down to the local wine shop for a great 2007 brunello. Now I am ready to begin the maiden voyage….let’s first start with a glass of the fabulous wine….

Since I make my own compound butters I decided to jazz up the potatoes and filets. Roasted garlic butter sounded divine for the sliced baked potatoes then top them off with fresh herbs and raclette cheese. For the filets, bagna cauda butter sounded exquisite, a wonderful combination of garlic, anchovy, and butter….the PERFECT basting sauce.

The mushrooms were calling for caramelized shallots with marsala wine and the green beans wanted to float in a garlic oil bath. I felt like a musical was happening in our house as everything was singing so incredibly together, I’m sure the wine was helping me to hear….

I set the cast iron skillet on top of the stove and preheated the oil. It was go time, everything else was prepared and done and it was the moment to cook the steaks…..I tapped my inner chef and we began…..I seasoned the filets with salt and pepper and set them down into the pan, SIZZLE….it was music to my ears……I then put in some bagna cauda butter to melt and fresh rosemary. I spooned some over the top while the filets seared and then flipped them over. So far so good (whew) and now to finish in the oven, the magical moment where it all comes together (or not) and then off to rest for 15.

I served up a beautiful presentation, the filets in the middle of a big white plate topped high with sautéed mushrooms and a terra-cotta bowl nestled alongside for the potato. Time for another glass of wine as it was the hour of truth…..

I took a bite and so did he, we looked at each other and said just one word……PERFECT……

IMG_6511

Potato

Filet Mignon with Bagna Cauda Butter, Sauteed Marsala Mushrooms and Sliced Baked Potatoes
 
Print
Prep time
30 mins
Cook time
1 hour
Total time
1 hour 30 mins
 
What makes the perfect steak? Is it using a classic preparation or an innovative one? For me it’s a classic preparation with innovative accompaniments.
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Main
Cuisine: American
Serves: 2
Ingredients
  • 2 - 8 ounce center-cut tenderloin steaks, at least 2-3 inches thick
  • 2 sprigs of fresh rosemary
  • 8 ounces of shitake mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 shallot, thinly sliced
  • ⅛ - ¼ cup marsala wine
  • 2 medium russet potatoes
  • 3 ounces of shredded raclette cheese, or any sharp cheese
  • bunch of parsley chopped
  • 2 heads of garlic, roasted and chopped
  • 2 sticks of butter
  • 1 small jar of anchovies, finely chopped
  • 8 cloves of garlic, minced
  • Olive oil
  • Salt and pepper
Instructions
  1. Roasted Garlic:
  2. Take 2 heads of garlic and put in foil. Top with oil, salt, pepper, a few small chunks of butter. Roast at 350 for about 45 minutes or until golden. Take out of oven and remove cloves, chop.
  3. For the roasted garlic butter:
  4. Bring 1 stick of butter to room temperature, soft enough to stir with a wooden spoon.
  5. Stir in the roasted garlic, blend well.
  6. For the bagna cauda butter:
  7. Bring 1 stick of butter to room temperature, soft enough to stir with a wooden spoon.
  8. Stir in garlic and anchovies, blend well
  9. For mushrooms:
  10. In a medium saucepan on stovetop, put in 2 T olive oil and add shallots. Stir and cook until slightly caramelize. Add marsala wine and cook for 2 minutes. Add mushrooms and a little more olive oil or butter and cook until mushrooms are soft. Season with salt and pepper and keep warm.
  11. For potatoes:
  12. Preheat oven to 400
  13. Peel potatoes and rinse. Cut into thin slices but NOT all the way through and slightly spread part.
  14. Put potatoes in a baking dish
  15. Melt some of the roasted garlic butter, about 3 T, and spoon over top of potato along with salt, pepper, and herbs, getting some between each slice.
  16. Bake for 45 minutes or until done. Once or twice during cooking, spoon melted butter from the bottom of the pan over potatoes. Top with cheese and bake an additional 10 minutes.
  17. For filet minions:
  18. minutes before cooking, pull filets out and bring to room temperature. Season with salt and pepper.
  19. In a medium cast-iron skillet over medium high heat, heat 3T of olive oil until hot. Add steaks and some bagna cauda butter and 2 sprigs of fresh rosemary. Spoon some butter over top and cook for 3 minutes. Flip over, put in another area of pan for equal heat, and cook another 3 minutes and spoon over butter. Immediately place in 400 degree oven for 8 minutes. Every 3 minutes baste with butter. Remove and let rest for 15 minutes.
  20. Notes:
  21. Remaining compound butters can be stored either in a container in fridge or placed on a sheet of saran wrap and formed into a log and stored in fridge.
  22. If you want filets to be done same time as potatoes, time accordingly as they cook at same temperatures and be sure to include 15 minutes of resting time for filets.
3.2.2885

Meat2

Filed Under: Meat and Poultry Tagged With: anchovy, bagna cauda, baked, filet minion, herbs, Mushrooms, potato, raclette, roasted garlic butter, sauteed, shitake, sliced, steaks, tenderloin

Pork Loin Pasties with Caramelized Onions, Potatoes and Roasted Garlic

December 9, 2014 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

IMG_5778

These pockets of deliciousness are called pasties. They are Cornish and are traditionally filled with beef, potato, and onion and topped with a rich gravy but I fondly remember them as being called “love letters from home”, wondering why?

My parents grew up in Butte Montana and if you know anything or have heard anything about Butte, it is a copper mining town. People from ALL over the world migrated there at the turn of the century to get a piece of the action of the booming mining industry. All of the influxes of ethnicities is what made Butte the “melting pot” of the west and with that came all the wonderful cuisines.

It was and still is very very shall I say colorful? Oh let me be honest, it is a total trip to be there, total. Its worth a visit just for the experience, trust me. Maybe in another post I will fill you in on some Butte stories….

Now back to why they are called “love letters from home”. The underground miners worked long days in very dangerous conditions and they each carried a lunch bucket because when they went underground, they didn’t come back up until their shift was over, typically 10-12 hours. During their shift work, labor was really intense and they needed a substantial meal to get them through the long hours. The pasty was one of the staples in their lunch buckets for a couple of reasons, it was hearty but more importantly, every time a miner left for work there was a chance he wouldn’t come home so their wives or mothers sent these as a reminder they were loved and to return home at the end of each day.

I adored that story and when my mother and grandmother made these for us I always knew they were “love letters from home” and I like to pass that same feeling on when I make them for the ones I love.

I remember we always made them during the fall and winter because they are the ultimate comfort food. It took a small army of helpers for the prep work. We were enlisted to peel the potatoes, cut the onions or dice the meat while my mom or grandmother made that perfect crust.

As they baked, which felt like eternity, we anxiously stood near the oven. The smell was out of this world yummy and when they came out, we each chose the one we wanted, the more crust the better, slathered on a ton of gravy and mix all of it together with the homemade coleslaw.

Here is my personal version, filled with pork loin, roasted garlic, potatoes, and caramelized onions topped with a home made pork gravy. It is totally WORTH it to make them from scratch, I promise, after all, you are sending a “love letter from home” and those take time..

Pork Loin Pasties with Caramelized Onions and Roasted Garlic
 
Print
Prep time
3 hours
Cook time
1 hour 30 mins
Total time
4 hours 30 mins
 
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Main Dish
Cuisine: Cornish
Serves: 28
Ingredients
  • 10 lb Pork loin roast, diced to ¼ inch
  • 3 onion, halved and thinly sliced and caramelized
  • 1 Bunch garlic cloves, roasted
  • 10 Medium russet potatoes, peeled and cut in quarters
  • 12 Cups Flour
  • 12 Sticks Butter
  • 2 tsp Salt
  • 4 Cups ice water, plus more if needed
  • 1 Onion (Chopped)
  • 4 Pork loin ribs
  • 1 cup white wine, preferably pinot grigio or sauvignon blanc
  • Ham rue, I use "better than bullion brand"
  • Chicken rue, I use "better than bullion brand"
  • ½ Cup Flour
  • Salt and pepper
Instructions
  1. Early in morning, measure 6 cups flour in a bowl and cut up cold butter, salt and work together flour and butter until mealy. Add water slowly and just squeeze to bring together. Don't work dough or it will get too hard. Once it comes together, put into 4 small balls and put in fridge for at least 30 minutes. Repeat with other 6 cups flour.
  2. On stove top, heat medium sauté pan and add 2-3 T butter and melt. Add onion and cook down until caramelized.
  3. Heat oven to 350. In a sheet of foil, add a bunch of garlic cloves. Toss with olive oil, salt, and pepper and dot with a little butter. Roast until golden brown but shake foil packet 2-3 times while cooking.
  4. Cut up pork loin into small dice, ¼ inch. With a tabletop grinder or kitchen aide grinder attachment, grind potatoes. Put out 3 bowls and divide pork evenly. Add ⅓ potatoes without water and incorporate into meat. Season with salt and pepper. Fold in ⅓ onion and garlic. Repeat with other 2 bowls.
  5. Take 2 dough balls out and divide into 3 or 4 slices and start to roll out into individual rounds. Put a full scoop of meat plus a bit more. Brush with water. Top with butter and fold over. Trim extra dough and fold over and pinch together. Put on parchment lined baking sheet. Sheet should hold 5 pasties and each bowl should make about 9 pasties.
  6. Turn oven to 350 and brush top of pasties with milk. Cook for 45 min then switch for another 45 min.
  7. While making pasties, cook pork ribs with salt and pepper for 45 min to 1 hour.
  8. While pasties are cooking, put 1 stick of buttering Dutch oven over med heat.
  9. Add onion and sauté until translucent. Season with salt and pepper. Add drippings from ribs and ½ cup flour. Stir until rue. Add 1 cup wine and fill with water. Add ham rue to taste and a little chicken rue. Boil until thick and season as needed. Strain and return to pot.
  10. Serve pasties immediately with gravy and coleslaw.
  11. Can cut recipe down if wanting to make less but they freeze beautifully.
  12. If freezing, individually wrap each pasty in foil and place in a ziplock bag. Reheat at 300 degrees for 20-30 minutes or until heated through.
3.2.2885

 

Filed Under: Meat and Poultry Tagged With: caramelized, Garlic, gravy, onion, pastry, pasty, pork, pork loin, potato, roasted

  • « Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Meet Michelle and Enrique

Eatentions is a way of being with our food experience. It is a thought-filled process starting with connection to source all the way through the finished creation. We like to call it "from root to experience". Its the entire thing, its that conscious. Thank you for popping by and welcome to our life.

Let’s Connect!

Archives

Categories




My Favorites

Arancini|Eatentions

Arancini

Torta Caprese

Torta Caprese

Lemon Pasta with Broiled Salmon and Charred Lemon|eatentions

Lemon Pasta with Broiled Salmon and Charred Lemon

Footer

Instagram

Instagram has returned invalid data.

Follow Me!

Connect With Us

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter

We believe in celebrating amazing people, delicious food, great conversation, sustainability and experience. For us,our lives have always been about love, family, friends and sharing all things together. Connecting with people through food, sharing stories and supporting one another to live our dreams and our purpose is what inspires us daily.

My Favorites

Arancini|Eatentions
Torta Caprese

Copyright © 2026 · Foodie Pro & The Genesis Framework