Make your own low carb chicken recipes and healthy chicken recipes

Make your own low carb chicken recipes and healthy chicken recipes

Following are 2 easily make healthy chicken recipes and low carb chicken recipes. Give it a go and share them with your family and friends.

Chestnut Chicken
Serves 4

Nutritional Values
10 ½ meat, 3 starch, 1 ½ fat, 1 vegetable, 1 fruit, 1 sugar
Protein 108g
Fat 65g
Carbohydrate 106g
Total Calories 1440

Ingredients:
1 small chicken (cut into 16 pieces)
2 Tbsp oyster sauce

1 Tbsp sesame oil
5 slices ginger
5 cloves garlic (crushed)
15 dried chestnuts (boil until soft and remove skin)
10 Chinese mushrooms (soaked)
12 red dates
1 carrot (sliced)

For seasoning:
¼ cup rice wine
1 Tbsp light soya sauce
Black pepper
2 tsp corn flour
1 ½ cup water

Garnishing:
Spring onions and parsley (cut into 2cm length)

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Cooking Methods:
Marinate chicken with oyster sauce for 30 minutes and drain. Put aside.

In a large pan, put in sesame oil, garlic and ginger, then stir-fry until brown. Add chicken pieces and continue to stir-fry until lightly browned. Add chestnuts, dates, carrots and mushrooms then continue to stir-fry. Stir in the sesoning, cover and simmer on low heat for about 10 minutes.

Garnish with spring onions and parsley.

Chicken Korma

Serves 4-6

Nutritional Values:
10 meat, 5 fat, 1 vegetable
Protein 95g
Fat 95g
Carbohydrate 15g
Total Calories 1290

Ingredients:
1 small chicken (1 kg) cut into large pieces

1 stick cinnamon
3 whole cloves
2 tsp white pepper corns
2 tsp aniseed
1 Tbsp whole cumin
½ tsp turmeric powder
1 thumb size ginger
5 cloves garlic
4 medium onions
5 pieces candle nuts

1 cup coconut milk
1 ½ cups water
Salt to taste

Cooking Methods:
Dry fry cinnamon, cloves, pepper corns, aniseed, cumin and turmeric powder in a heated frying pan until the spices are fragrant but not brown. Grind spices until powder fine in a coffee grinder. Set aside.

Blend ginger, garlic, onions and candle nuts in a food processor. Cook the coconut milk in a non-stick wok until the oil separates, stir-fry onions, ginger and garlic in the coconut oil until golden. Mix in the spices and fry gently for 3 more minutes.

After that, add in chicken, stirring frequently for about 5 minutes. Next add in the water and simmer the chicken pieces uncovered until tender.

Slowly stir in the rest of the coconut milk. Serve hot.

You can move ahead to lowsugar-recipes.com for a large collection of free healthy chicken recipes and low carb chicken recipes.

Microwave cooking tips

Microwave cooking tips

If your kitchen is like most kitchens these days, you’ve probably got a microwave oven sitting in it. And what do you use it for? Reheating? Melting butter or chocolate when baking? Maybe the kids throw a hot dog in once in a while. Well, if that’s how your microwave gets used, you’re missing out on a great cooking tool. After all, why heat up your oven when you can do the whole job in the microwave in the time it takes to pre-heat your oven?

A couple of good reasons to use your microwave instead of your oven are that no pre-heating is needed and the cost is greatly reduced. Using your microwave for 100 hours will cost about .00 compared to about .00 for 100 hours of conventional oven use.

Understanding how a microwave works will also help you rethink using it a little more, too. Molecules of fat, sugar and water within food attract microwaves that reflect against the metal walls of the oven. The molecules begin to vibrate against one another causing friction and that’s the heat that cooks the food.

The microwaves can only penetrate food 1-1&1/2 inches so larger dishes need the vibrating molecules to move from the outside edges to the center of the food for it to be cooked. That’s why food placement, dish quality and cooking quantity are all important when cooking in the microwave.

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Microwaves can pass through plastic, paper, wood and glass but not through metals. That’s why you’ll get “Arching” or sparking if you put metal in the microwave.

A good rule to remember when cooking in the microwave is that approximately 6 minutes per pound will cook most foods including meat, poultry and fruit and vegetables. Seafood will take less time and reducing the power of your microwave will require longer cooking time. About 20% of the cooking time takes place after the oven turns off so make sure you remember that your food will continue cooking after you’ve removed it.

You might be used to your ovens temperature in degrees but you can convert your microwave’s temperature that is described in power or watts. A microwave on high or 100% power is about the same as having your oven at 425 degrees. A 350-degree oven would be about the same as a microwave at 50% power.

You can determine the wattage of a microwave by placing 1 cup of tap water in a two cup measuring cup. Heat on high for two minutes. If the water boils in two minutes or less, the microwave is probably 700 watts or more. If it takes longer than it is 600 watts or less.

Different foods will require different temperatures to cook properly and while you should follow the 6 minutes per pound rule, add more minutes as you drop the power. Using 50% power, you’d want to cook your food for about 11 minutes. Cooking something that takes an hour in the oven should take about 15 minutes in the microwave.

Here are some helpful hints when cooking in the microwave:

Arrange food in dish so that the thicker part is on the outside and the thinner part inside for more even cooking.

Using a dish with a cone in the center will also help distribute heat evenly.

Let foods such as cakes with baking powder in them stand a few minutes before cooking to allow the leavening agents to work.

Don’t use as much liquid — if a recipe calls for milk and water, cut back on the water. You might want to use fewer spices as well.

Open covers away from you to release steam.

If you cover it in the regular oven, cover it in the microwave too.

Ready to try it yet? Get out your favorite cookbook and get cooking. You’ll be saving time and money and still eating those foods you love.

I love to cook. Cooking is an art. http://www.planyourdinner.com

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