Chicken Stroganoff

Chicken Stroganoff

  • Serves: 6
  • Prep Time: 00:10
  • Cooking Time: 00:35
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This dairy-free Paleo Chicken Stroganoff is packed with flavour, a delicious, comforting weeknight meal, that's cooked up in one pan. I've used skinless chicken thigh fillets but chicken breast fillets can also be used, you will just need a bit longer for them to cook through. It's a very low-carb meal when served with steamed vegetables or cauliflower rice.

Ingredients

* Please click on the green icon next to the ingredients listed below for extra details and helpful information.

  • 1.2 - 1.4Kg (8 pieces) skinless chicken thigh fillets
  • 3 - 4 Tbsp ghee, divided
  • 1 1/2 tsp smoked paprika
  • Fine sea salt, and ground black pepper
  • 1 Lge onion(s), thinly sliced
  • 200 - 250g sliced mushrooms
  • 3 tspn minced garlic
  • 500ml (2 cups) chicken broth/stock
  • 2 Tbsp arrowroot flour, or tapioca
  • 250ml (1 cup) coconut cream, (a thick brand like Ayam)
  • 1 Tbsp lime juice
  • To garnish, chopped parsley

Directions

Heat a large frying pan on medium-high and melt 2 tablespoons of the ghee.

Sprinkle the chicken with the smoked paprika, salt and pepper on both sides. Add half the chicken to the hot pan and cook for 5 minutes, or until browned, then turn over and cook the other side until browned and cooked through, approximately 4-5 minutes. Repeat with the remaining chicken. Remove to a plate and set aside until the sauce is ready.

Lower the heat of your pan to medium and add the remaining ghee and onions, and cook, stirring often, for approximately 3 minutes. Then add the mushrooms and cook for a further 5 minutes, stirring often. Add the garlic and stir through the onion/mushroom mixture.

Pour the broth into the pan, keeping approximately 3 tablespoons of broth aside to make a slurry. Add the arrowroot to the remaining broth and stir until a smooth paste forms. Pour into the pan and stir continuously as the sauce thickens. Pour in the coconut cream and lime juice, stir to combine.

Add the chicken back into the pan and simmer for 3 - 4 minutes or until the chicken is heated through.

Garnish with chopped parsley and serve with steamed vegetables or cauliflower rice.

chicken thigh fillets

Choose grass-fed, free-range boneless chicken fillets and organic if available. Chicken is a meat that can be injected with hormones to plumb it up, shop carefully. A good source of protein.

ghee

Ghee is a lactose-free ancient superfood. It is made by slow cooking and clarifying butter to remove the milk solids and lactose, it's pure butter fat. You can get the flavour of butter in your cooking without the dairy (please don't consume if you have an allergy to ghee). My favourite brands are Organic Valley Purity Farms or Puresoul grass-fed. It is also very easy to make yourself. Ghee has a high smoke point 485F/250C.

smoked paprika

Paprika is a relative of the chili pepper. Smoked paprika is used to add a sweet mildly spicy flavour to dishes and it adds a warm natural colour. Use organic smoked paprika, my favourite brands are Simply Organic or Frontier (I purchase online at iherb).

sea salt

Organic unbleached, unrefined organic Celtic sea salt or pink Himalayan salt is my salt of choice as these contain healthy minerals and trace elements that our body needs. Regular table salt has been bleached, refined and processed leaving minimal health benefits. If you choose to use regular table salt in my recipes you will need to reduce the quantity or the end result will be to salty.

onion(s)

In my recipes when listing onion I am referring to a brown (also called yellow) onion. Onions are members of the allium plant family which also includes garlic, leeks, spring onions and shallots. Onions are valued more for the flavour they impart in cooking than for their nutritional content. Onions are know for their antibacterial effect helping to prevent superficial infections and their sulfur compounds may block carcinogens.

mushrooms

Mushrooms are classified as fungi. Edible mushrooms are very low in kilojoules, rich in minerals and B complex vitamins, when exposed to UV light they contain large amounts of vitamin D2. Mushrooms are also used for medicinal purposes.

garlic

Garlic is a close relative to the onion and has been used throughout history for both medicinal and culinary purposes. In most of my recipes I use minced garlic as I find it distributes better throughout the dish. When in a hurry I use organic minced garlic which I purchase in glass jars and store in the fridge. When garlic powder is needed for a particular recipe, I use 'Simply Organic' brand. Why is garlic so good for us? It is an immune booster, antibiotic, good for the heart, cancer fighter and it's also knew as a weight loss aid (appetite suppressant).

chicken broth/stock

Making homemade chicken broth is a great way to heal Leaky Gut and excellent to drink when unwell. Traditionally broth was made just from bones and simmered for hours to remove the gelatin, marrow and goodness from them. These days vegetables are also added to give extra flavour. By using a slow cooker, making your own broth/stock is so easy. As soon as a roast chicken is eaten, all the bones go into the freezer ready for the next batch of broth. If purchasing store-bought stocks, read the labels as many companies have changed the name of MSG to yeast extract. Organic or free-range brands are available. My Chicken broth recipe is on page 295 of The JOYful Table cookbook. Freeze ice block trays filled with chicken broth for when a small amount is required for a recipe. You can also use an organic concentrated bone broth paste or dehydrated chicken bone broth powder and add them to filtered water.

arrowroot flour

Arrowroot is a herb, the roots are cultivated for its starch properties. It is used in my recipes as a thickener and I also like combining it with almond meal to produce a much lighter texture, more like a gluten flour. I find the starch helps to bind the ingredients together. You can substitute tapioca flour, which is made from the dried roots of the cassava plant. Tapioca can be used in baking, it has a slightly sweet flavour. However, I do not recommend thickening with tapioca, as it has a stretchy, gummy texture. Supermarkets only sell in very small containers, which is not cost effective. Purchase from baking specialty stores, health food stores or online. ( When substituting for cornflour in recipes, 2 teaspoons arrowroot = 1 tablespoon cornflour/starch).

coconut cream

I use this extensively throughout my recipes; from soups to dinners to desserts and cakes. I think it is the best dairy-free alternative. It gives so much flavour and creaminess to a wide variety of dishes. When purchasing in the can read your labels, even some organic brands contain gums and thickeners, choose full-fat not low-fat versions. I use Honest To Goodness organic cream 400ml and Ayam which isn't organic but has no additives or thickeners and is much creamier and thicker than other brands (that's why I love it), it comes in 400ml, 270ml and 140ml size cans.

lime juice

A lime is a green citrus fruit. The juice adds flavour to dishes and beverages. There are several species of the lime tree. They are an excellent source of vitamin C and calcium. I like to add lime juice to my curries. The juice also tenderizes the meat in your dish, leaving you with lovely juicy, tender meat or chicken.

parsley

Parsley would be the most widely used herb worldwide. The two main varieties of this herb are curly parsley with ruffled leaves and Italian parsley with flat leaves. In general flat-leaf parsley has a more robust flavour than the curly leave parsley. Its fresh green flavour and colour can be much more than just a garnish. Both kinds of parsley may be used in cooking. Fresh parsley contains useful amounts of vitamin C, calcium, iron and potassium. Parsley is also high in bioflavonoids and other anticancer compounds.