From the blog For Love of the Table
2 c. rich chicken stock or good quality low-salt broth
Salt
1 c. (4 oz.) cipollini onions, peeled and quartered (halved if smaller)
1/3 lb. carrots (2 large), trimmed and peeled and cut on a short diagonal 1/4-inch thick (1 cup)
1 stalk celery, trimmed and cut on a short diagonal 1/4-inch thick (1/2 cup)
4 oz. crimini or white mushrooms, halved or quartered
3 T. butter, divided
2 c. (8 oz.) shredded cooked chicken
1 c. (5 oz.) frozen baby lima beans, thawed
3 T. flour
1/3 c. heavy cream
Freshly Ground Pepper
Chilled Pâte Brisée "Lid" (see below)
1 egg, well-beaten
Place 2 cups of chicken stock in a small saucepan and bring to a simmer, season with salt to taste and add the onions, carrots and celery. Simmer gently until the vegetables are tender—about 15 minutes. Strain the broth into a two cup measure. Add water (or more broth) to make 1 2/3 cup total liquid. Place the drained vegetables in a bowl and set aside. Return the broth to the saucepan and keep hot.
While the vegetables poach, melt a tablespoon of butter in a medium sauté pan. When the butter is melted, increase the heat to medium-high. Add the mushrooms and sauté until browned and tender. Season with salt and add to the bowl with the onions, carrots and celery. Add the lima beans and chicken to the bowl and toss to combine.
Return the pan the mushrooms were cooked in to the burner and melt another two tablespoons of butter over medium heat. When the butter foams, whisk in the flour. Cook stirring constantly for a few minutes—the roux will be bubbly and straw yellow. Remove from the heat and pour in half of the hot broth, whisking constantly until smooth—it will thicken immediately. Add the remaining broth and the cream. Return to the heat and stir constantly until the sauce returns to a simmer. Taste and season as desired with salt and pepper. Scrape the sauce into the bowl of chicken and vegetables and fold in. Taste and correct the seasoning.
Turn the chicken/vegetable mixture into a buttered 1 1/2 quart casserole. Place the prepared sheet of dough over the casserole. Either fold the edges of the dough under and crimp the edge, or simply allow the dough to hang over the edge of the dish. Brush the dough with a thin film of egg wash. If you have not already cut round vent holes in the dough, use the tip of a sharp knife to make several decorative slashes in the dough to serve as vents. Place the pot pie on a baking sheet and place in a pre-heated 400° oven. Bake until the crust is golden brown and the filling is bubbling—about 30 to 40 minutes. Let the pie cool for a few moments before serving. Serves 4.
Variations & Substitutions:
Substitute 1 cup 1/2-inch diced onion for the cipollinis. Instead of poaching them in the broth with the carrot and celery, soften them in the 2 T. of butter before adding the flour.
Use one large leek instead of the cipollinis. Trim away the root and dark green. Halve the leek lengthwise and cut each half cross-wise in 1/2-inch wide pieces. Rinse in several changes of water to remove all soil and grit. Poach with the carrots and celery.
Replace the lima beans with peas.
For the cooked chicken you may use any type of cooked chicken you like...leftovers, or freshly poached or roasted (even purchased "rotisserie")....white or dark meat (I prefer dark). If you choose to poach your chicken, add a wedge of onion, a chunk of carrot, a short piece of celery, and a sprig or two of thyme to the poaching liquid—you may use water or broth for the poaching medium. Use some of this strained chicken poaching liquid (essentially rich homemade stock) as the base liquid for the pie (for poaching the vegetables and making the sauce). If you are using a roast chicken, deglaze the roasting pan with stock and add the deglazings to the vegetable poaching liquid. If you are starting from raw chicken (as opposed to using leftovers or purchased) you will need about a pound of parts to produce the half pound of meat needed for the pie.
If you like, add some fresh herbs—minced thyme or flat-leaf parsley—to the filling mixture.
You may use any combination of cooked vegetables you like for this pot pie as long as you have four cups total of cooked vegetables.
This recipe makes enough of the filling to fill a 1 1/2 quart baking dish and serves four. Divide or multiply the recipe as you like to feed 2, 4, 6 or 8—adjusting the size of the baking dish accordingly. The quantity of dough in the recipe is sufficient to cover a 13- by 9-inch baking dish (which will hold a double recipe of filling).
Working ahead: You can of course make the filling, immediately turn it into the casserole, top it with the chilled crust and bake. But you may also make the filling ahead. To do so, pour the warm filling in the prepared casserole, cool and chill. An hour or so before you are ready to bake the pie, pull it out of the refrigerator and allow it to come to room temperature. Top with the crust and bake as directed, extending the cooking time as necessary. As before, bake until the crust is golden and the filling hot and bubbling.
You may prepare individual pot pies. Choose four oven proof casseroles with a capacity of 1 1/2 cups each. Cut the dough in rounds with a diameter that is at least 1 inch larger than the opening of your sen casseroles. When making individual pies, cool the filling completely before topping with the crust (a warm filling would cause the butter in the crust to soften too much in the amount of time it would take to top all four pies).
Pâte Brisée:
1 1/2 c. all-purpose flour (6 oz.)
1/2 t. salt
9 T. cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/4-inch thick slices (4 1/2 oz.)
3 to 4 1/2 T. ice water
Combine the flour and the salt in a medium-sized bowl. Rub the butter into the flour until the butter is in small pea-sized pieces. Drizzle 3 T. ice water over the flour/butter mixture. Using your hands, fluff the mixture until it begins to clump, adding more water if necessary. Turn the dough out onto a counter and form into a mound. Using the heel of your hand, gradually push all of the dough away from you in short forward strokes, flattening out the lumps. Continue until all of the dough is flat. Using a bench scraper, scrape the dough off the counter, forming it into a single clump as you do. Form the finished dough into a thick disk. Chill for at least 30 minutes.
To roll out, let dough warm up for a moment or two. Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface into a rectangle, round, oval or square (depending on the shape of your casserole) that is about 1/8- to 1/6–inch thick. Take the casserole you will be baking the pot pie in and invert it onto the dough. Following the shape of the casserole, cut the dough so there will be a 1/2- to 1-inch overhang of dough all the way around. Brush off the excess flour and transfer the dough to a baking sheet. Chill until ready to build the pot pie (it should chill for at least 30 minutes). If you like, you use a small smooth or fluted round cutter to cut out two or three vents in the sheet of dough.
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