Two-Minute Dinner
I had the world's greatest assignment for the June issue of Bon Appetit. I can't tell you all the details because it hasn't hit newsstands yet, but it involves summer and it involves rules and it involves cooking. I was putting the story together in the middle of February -- during one of those stretches of bean-soup-making snow days -- so I'm warning you in advance that you may pick up a strong undertone of dreaminess. (Does anything seem more romantic than summer cooking and al fresco dining when you are sitting in your kitchen wearing Uggs?) Anyway, today I want to talk about one particular nugget of dinner wisdom in the story. It went like this: "Always grill twice as much protein as you need. You'll never regret having leftover chicken or steak when dinner rolls around the next night." You know I've never met an advance-planning strategy I didn't love, so that stuck with me all the way to the first night of grilling -- a rainy April night when we actually had no business grilling, we were just so sick of the cold spring and just really really wanted grilling season to be...NOW. And so we christened the patio with our grilled chicken for people who hate grilled chicken (coming soon: a knock-out variation on it) and, of course, made twice as much. And on Day Two had all the makings of a delicious, healthy two-minute dinner.
Abby's version of the dinner: Most likely the first Mediterranean platter in the history of the world served with Trader Joe's Soyaki.
Grilled Chicken Mediterranean Plate
Place 4 whole wheat pocketless pita rounds on four separate plates. (Or tear pitas into pieces if you don't think your kid wants the fully assembled sandwich.) Spread a generous layer of hummus (I like original creamy -- none of that jalapeno or sundried tomato business) on each plate. Top with leftover pieces grilled chicken (about 3-4 pieces, sliced should be enough; or some shreds of storebought rotisserie if you didn't grill last night), crumbled feta, salted cucumber (chopped), a little fresh thyme or oregano, a drizzle of olive oil, and freshly ground pepper.