Chicken Tagine With Olives and Preserved Lemons
Updated January 24, 2019
- Total Time
- 1 hour, plus marinating
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
5 cloves garlic, finely chopped
¼ teaspoon saffron threads, pulverized
½ teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon sweet paprika
½ teaspoon ground cumin
½ teaspoon turmeric
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 chicken, cut in 8 to 10 pieces
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
3 medium onions, sliced thin
1 cinnamon stick
8 calamata olives, pitted and halved
8 cracked green olives, pitted and halved
1 large or 3 small preserved lemons (sold in specialty food shops)
1 cup chicken stock
Juice of ½ lemon
1 tablespoon chopped flat-leaf parsley
Preparation
- Step 1
Mix garlic, saffron, ginger, paprika, cumin and turmeric together. If not using kosher chicken, add ½ teaspoon salt. Add pepper to taste. Rub chicken with mixture, cover, refrigerate and marinate 3 to 4 hours.
- Step 2
Heat oil in heavy skillet. Add chicken, and brown on all sides. Remove to platter. Add onions to skillet, and cook over medium-low heat about 15 minutes, until lightly browned. Transfer to tagine, if you are using one, or leave in skillet. Add cinnamon stick.
- Step 3
Put chicken on onions. Scatter with olives. Quarter the lemons, remove pulp and cut skin in strips. Scatter over chicken. Mix stock and lemon juice. Pour over chicken.
- Step 4
Cover tagine or skillet. Place over low heat, and cook about 30 minutes, until chicken is done. Scatter parsley on top, and serve.
Private Notes
Comments
I've made this several times.
A few points/suggestions.
* See Paula Wolfert's "Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco" for variations.
* I know it's customary to use both saffron and turmeric in Morocco. IMO this is a mistake. Turmeric is excellent, but it's not subtle and overwhelms the saffron. Use one or the other. I use saffron.
* The recipe says discard the preserved lemon pulp. However, Paula Wolfert says she does not bother and uses the pulp. So do I.
"Marinating" the chicken in the spices doesn't really work. Skip this step and add the spices to the onions. (The spice rub burned in the pan while the chicken was browning.)
I have made this several times. I use 6-8 chicken thighs, bone-in and skin on. After browning chicken in step 2, I remove and discard the skin, leaving flavorful fond in the skillet. Drain excess chicken fat at this point.
I increase the amount of olives, and sometimes garnish with cilantro instead of parsley. A small amount of honey, added at the end of cooking, can add balance if it's too acidic.
Honestly do not understand the thousands of 5 stars when the comments are evenly divided between great and not great. We are in the not-great camp - it should be called tagine soup. Made for a dinner party and it was not a hit to say the least. Won’t make again.
This is very good. However a few changes. I used less preserved lemon. I don't know what size a large or small one would be, but the first time I put in 3 and it was too floral. This time I use 2 and it was perfect. The garlic did burn while I browned the chicken. I think I will saute the garlic with the onions next time, not add it to the marinade. i only used chicken legs, bone in skin off so the marinade penetrates the chicken.
Followed the recipe except: - made quick preserved lemons from NYT, sliced thin with pulp and put whole thing in, with the pulp and juice. Used two lemons. - only marinated the chicken about an hour - only chicken thighs Thought it all worked out great. I was worried would be too salty, but just fine. Very lemony, which we loved. Only change I would make is decrease broth to 1/2 cup. But extra juice was awesome on couscous.

