Weeknight Cooking

Negima Yakitori + Olive Oil-Braised Broccoli Rabe

July  7, 2015

Today: Skewers, yakitori chicken, broccoli rabe, and ricotta—have it all at dinner tonight.

 

You want everything for dinner tonight and you won't settle for anything less. Well, have we got a meal for you. Satisfy your animalistic hunger by tearing pieces of flavor-packed Negima Yakitori off a skewer with your teeth between bites of the subtler, humbler Olive Oil-Braised Broccoli Rabe on slices of baguette. This meal, which has just the right amount of variety and balance—Asian-inspired chicken and an Italian preparation of broccoli rabe—just might satisfy every craving you have.

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The Menu:

Click through on the recipe photos or titles to see (and save and print) the full recipes, or take advantage of our handy grocery list and overview below.

Negima Yakitori by Kathleen @HapaNom

 

Olive Oil-Braised Broccoli Rabe by Sarah Jampel

Grocery List:

(Organized by the area of the market)

Serves 4 to 6

1/4 cup sake
1/4 cup mirin
1 tablespoon sherry vinegar
1 inch fresh ginger, peeled and roughly chopped
1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh parsley
2 bunches of scallions
1 small hot red chili, seeded and thinly sliced
2 medium lemons
2 bunches broccoli rabe, cleaned, with hard, woody parts of stems removed
2 pounds chicken thighs, boneless and skinless, cut into 1 1/2-inch pieces

1 tablespoon toasted sesame seeds for garnish
1/4 cup pine nuts
1/4 cup old-fashioned rolled oats
Eight to ten 6-inch wooden skewers
Ricotta and baguette, for serving

We are assuming you already have salt and pepper, crushed red pepper, butter, flour, olive oil, canola or vegetable oil, cornstarch, garlic, sugar, and soy sauce. If not, add those to your list, too!

Overview:

About an hour and a half before dinnertime, prepare for culinary battle. Preheat the oven to 350° F and make the yakitori marinade in a small bowl. Set some of the marinade aside for basting later before placing the chicken in the bowl of marinade. Let it sit while you prepare the broccoli rabe.

In a large saucepan, start cooking the rabe—it takes about 50 minutes to cook, so you want to give yourself plenty of time. While it cooks, mix together the ingredients for the pine nut crumble then put it in the oven for 15 to 20 minutes until brown and fragrant. Sit back and grab a sip of wine while the ingredients do their thing.

With only 30 minutes until dinner is ready, thread the chicken and scallions onto skewers. Then, in an oiled cast iron pan, cook the yakitori in batches over medium-high heat, basting every 30 seconds or so with the marinade you set aside earlier. Once the skewers are cooked, sprinkle with sesame seeds—you're almost finished.

Thickly spread ricotta on slices of baguette, then top with the broccoli rabe and pine nut crumble—or serve dollops of ricotta atop the rabe and crumble. Or do both. Your dinner is complete.

Photos by Mark Weinberg and James Ransom

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Jaime Brockway

Written by: Jaime Brockway

Polenta, mac and cheese, farmers' market breakfasts, smoky food & drink. These are a few of my favorite things. I was an editorial intern @Food52 in 2015!

1 Comment

Millie |. July 9, 2015
Yakitori is my FAVOURITE (especially the negima type), I prefer the shio flavour but this still looks incredible!