It also has the advantage of being the near perfect use for one of those rotisserie chickens you find everywhere. Sam's Club and Cosco have the lowest price, but Target sells an amazing Southwestern spiced rotisserie bird that is always worth stopping by to buy (and under $6). There's even a quickie mart gas station that makes up 10 a day near me. What I find amazing is that these places sell the finished, cooked, seasoned birds cheaper than they sell a raw whole chicken. If anyone can explain the economics of how that is possible, I would love to hear it.
Have I told you before how cheap I am? Really, no matter how good of a recipe I see for a whole cooked chicken, I just can't wrap my head around spending a couple dollar extra, all the effort when the rotisserie bird is right there. HMMM... Cheap and lazy, I better change the subject...
I saw this recipe recently on eRecipeCards.com. It is very similar to a recipe I have been making for about a year. I had first seen this as a post by on the Mystery Lover's Kitchen Blog. Several months ago, Riley Adams (author of the newly released PERFECT summer reading culinary BBQ mystery, Finger Lickin' Dead) posted her version of this recipe. You can visit Riley's original blog post and her version of the recipe by clicking HERE. But My recipe has evolved, and now after seeing the recipe that Jess from THE HUNGRY HARPS blog, I picked up an additional modification for my favorite use of a rotisserie chicken.
I was very excited to find Jess submitting her posts to eRecipeCards.com. In the blog world, Jess is brand new. Just under 60 posts and only at it since February of this year. I remember when I first started as a blogger, wondering if anyone would ever care enough to read a post of mine. I was lucky enough to get some early encouragement from a couple of veteran bloggers. Since then, I have always enjoyed dropping in on a new blogger every once in awhile. It is great fun to watch them evolve. And Jess has already passed through the awkward stage of writing to no one. It is so much easier to write a post when you think of it as a conversation.
Jess is a stay at home mom, wife, mother of two (including a new born). She has dogs (and fish). I wonder what the connection is between food bloggers and pets. We all seem to have them. But I digress.
It was fun roaming through Jess's posts. Anything from Krispy Kreme Hamburgers (really, no that is an inspiration), to nostalgic reminiscent posts about food from the past ("Let's give it to Mickey, he won't eat it", complete with youtube links to 40 year old commercials). But mainly, Jess's point as a blogger is to put good food on her table, nothing fancy but always a little extra to set her table apart from a boring repetitive menu. The hardest job of all as a cook, not a fancy restaurant, but to cook for the same people night after night, meal after meal Make your dishes interesting, tasty, non-repetitive and something to look forward to! And Jess is doing that and she shares her efforts in her blog.
Take a second and head over to THE HUNGRY HARPS blog. Drop her a note, tell her hi for me (you remember hanging on every comment someone made. With only 60 posts, Jess will be thrilled to know someone is reading her).
And do take a look at her recipe for her "Awesome Chicken Spread". She makes hers as a spread for crackers, breads maybe for a sandwich (remember, everything tastes better on a Ritz). I make just about the same recipe, but I bake mine with crescent rolls for a very fast easy yet warm treat. Like i said, I get a request for this from my wife at least a couple of times a month. By far, this is the recipe she asks for more than any other.
It's just that good!
But I wanted to try something a bit new this time...
I ran across an amazing sale recently. Those jumbo rolls in a tube which normally cost $2.50 and up were available in a 10 pack bundle for only $8. 8 to a tube, that made them just a dime each. have I mentioned that I am cheap? I wondered if I could cook the rolls with the chicken filling in them like a slider. Would the bottom be cooked?
I also added a tip from Jess's recipe, and used a sample of dry herbs from a salad dressing "kit" (just the herbs, not the oil and mayo needed to make the dressing)....
And guess what... It worked great. I did use my pizza stone to bake these on. That way, the stone (pre heated) cooked from the bottom up, while the hot air of the oven cooked from the top down. The bottom half of the "bun" was indeed completely cooked. The chicken spread in the center was very nicely toasted, with the cheese and "extras" used to make the spread warm comforting and DELICIOUS...
Here's what I did...
Ingredients
6 oz cooked, chopped chicken
4 oz cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup chopped mushroom
2 T diced green onion
6 oz cooked, chopped chicken
4 oz cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup chopped mushroom
2 T diced green onion
1 TBS Mixed herbs (I had a packet of make your own dressing, used the dried herbs, not the oil or mayo). This added a savory taste. You could also use a Cajun spice for a spicy heat taste.
1 pkg Jumbo Dinner Rolls rolls (can of 8)
2 T melted butter
3/4 cup seasoned Bread Crumbs
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Be sure that you have a pizza stone preheated as well. HOT HOT HOT to cook the base of the slider from the bottom up. Combine chopped chicken, chopped mushroom, green onion, pepper, Cajun spices and softened cream cheese in a Kitchenaid Mixer (or mix by hand).
Unfold rolls. Split each in half. Add a 1/4 cup dollop of the chicken mixture to the center of each. spread the chicken goo evenly and top with the other half.
Line them up on parchment paper or a silicon mat. Drizzle with melted butter and sprinkle with bread crumbs. Place on a cookie sheet and bake for 12-15 minutes at 375, covering loosely with aluminum foil until the last five minutes.
1 pkg Jumbo Dinner Rolls rolls (can of 8)
2 T melted butter
3/4 cup seasoned Bread Crumbs
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Be sure that you have a pizza stone preheated as well. HOT HOT HOT to cook the base of the slider from the bottom up. Combine chopped chicken, chopped mushroom, green onion, pepper, Cajun spices and softened cream cheese in a Kitchenaid Mixer (or mix by hand).
Unfold rolls. Split each in half. Add a 1/4 cup dollop of the chicken mixture to the center of each. spread the chicken goo evenly and top with the other half.
Line them up on parchment paper or a silicon mat. Drizzle with melted butter and sprinkle with bread crumbs. Place on a cookie sheet and bake for 12-15 minutes at 375, covering loosely with aluminum foil until the last five minutes.
Again... Can't emphasize enough, these will never win a photo contest as prettiest food ever.
BUT they will win a taste contest with your family. Which prize is more important to you.
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