Don’t be afraid to really char your chicken thighs here (making sure to ventilate your kitchen well!) – this’ll add an intense flavour alongside the vibrant dressing and make for a very punchy eating experience. That said, you can also grill your chicken thighs in the oven, or swap them out for chicken breasts, if you prefer. Use a pair of kitchen scissors to help you easily remove the bones from the thighs, or ask your butcher to do this for you, making sure to keep the skins intact. Feel free to swap out the clementines for orange segments in the dressing; it’ll work just as well.
Serves: 4
Prep time: 25 minutes
Cook time: 40 minutes
Marinating time: 1 hour
Photography: Elena Heatherwick
Season: Autumn/Winter
Ingredients
6 large chicken thighs (1kg), boneless and skin on (850g)
11⁄2 tsp ground turmeric
1 tsp chilli flakes
1 tbsp fish sauce
2 tbsp olive oil
12 spring onions, trimmed, washed well and dried (180g)
salt
caramel & clementine dressing
85g caster sugar
30g fresh ginger, peeled and julienned
2 red chillies, deseeded, halved widthways and julienned (20g)
3 tbsp rice wine vinegar
3–4 limes: 1 halved, to serve, and the rest juiced to get 3 tbsp
2 tbsp fish sauce
2–3 clementines (200g), peeled (140g)
5g fresh coriander, roughly chopped, to serve
Method
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Put the chicken thighs, turmeric, chilli flakes, fish sauce, oil and 1 teaspoon of salt into
a large bowl and mix well to combine. Leave to marinate for an hour, or cover and refrigerate for longer (up to overnight). If the latter, remove the chicken thighs from the fridge about 45 minutes before cooking. -
Place a large cast-iron sauté pan on a medium-high heat and ventilate your kitchen well. Once hot, add half the chicken thighs, skin side down. Weigh down the thighs with a large saucepan around the same size, so they are well pressed into the pan. Cook for 6–8 minutes, or until the skin is charred and blackened. Remove the top pan and set the chicken thighs aside, then repeat with the remaining thighs. The second batch might blacken faster, so check them at the 5-minute mark. Remove all the chicken, setting it aside, and let the pan cool for 5–10 minutes.
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If needed, drain off all but 11⁄2 tablespoons of the fat collected in the pan and return
to a medium-high heat. Add the spring onions, using a pair of tongs to coat them in the fat, then put back the chicken thighs, skin side up, and any of their juices, nestling them into the spring onions, along with 90ml of water. Cook for 8 minutes, or until the chicken is tender and cooked through. Transfer the chicken to a cutting board and leave to rest for 5 minutes before slicing each thigh into 2cm-wide strips. -
While the chicken is cooking, make the caramel and clementine dressing. Heat a medium saucepan on a medium- high heat. Once hot, turn the heat down to medium and sprinkle in the sugar to coat the base – it should immediately start to melt and colour around the sides. Swirl the pan, without stirring, so that all the sugar melts and turns deeply golden, about 11⁄2–2 minutes. Add the ginger and chillies, and stir continuously for 45 seconds, just to take off the spicy edge. Quickly add the vinegar, lime juice and fish sauce, stirring to combine. Cook for 30 seconds, then remove from the heat. Leave to cool for 10 minutes.
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Use a small serrated knife to slice the clementines into 1cm- thick rounds, then pull at them gently to halve them (don’t worry if they break apart further). Stir these into the cooled sauce.
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To serve, transfer the spring onions to a large platter and top with the chicken and any pan juices, using a spatula to keep each thigh together. Pour the dressing all over, then sprinkle with the coriander. Lastly, squeeze over the lime halves.
Read more: OTK: Extra Good Things
There are a lot of pretty good things that come out of the Ottolenghi Test Kitchen, which is why the sequel to the first OTK cookbook came so soon after. This one is all about extra elements to add to your meals to bring an additional level of flavour. In classic Ottolenghi style, these recipes are punchy, colourful and the kind that you could easily eat all to yourself or impress your pals with. Extracted from Ottolenghi Test Kitchen: Extra Good Things by Noor Murad and Yotam Ottolenghi (Ebury Press, £25) All photography by Elena Heatherwick.