The cookbook suggests this menu: Jellied chicken, potato chips, baby lima beans, yeast rolls, fresh fruit in season, brownies. We had it for lunch with homemade lard biscuits, green peas and orange custard for dessert.
Jellied Chicken
1 tablespoon gelatin -- (1 envelope)
1 ¼ cups hot chicken broth
2 cups cooked chicken -- cut up
½ teaspoon salt
Soften gelatin in 2 tbsp. cold water. Dissolve in hot broth. Cool until thickenend. Add chicken and salt.
Pour into oiled 9 x 5 x 3" loaf pan.
Chill until set. Unmold on cold platter. Serve cooled, with mayonnaise, if desired.
Garnish with olive slices, or parsley bouquets, radish roses, tomato wedges, or lettuce hearts.
Yield: "3 cups"
Per Serving: 99 Calories; 3g Fat (24.2% calories from fat); 17g Protein; trace Carbohydrate; 0g Dietary Fiber; 48mg Cholesterol; 258mg Sodium. Exchanges: 2 1/2 Lean Meat; 0 Other Carbohydrates.
I've never heard of this one, Sue... Jellied chicken sounds a bit different, but I'd be willing to try it once.
ReplyDeleteI've seen jellied entrees similar to this "frosted" with a mayonnaise mixture of some kind; would such an addition work with this recipe?
And what goes into such a "frosting"? Have you a recipe for such a thing?
While I eat most things....I just dont think I could swallow this one! Thanks for sharing, but I will pass.
ReplyDeleteHi from Australia,
ReplyDeleteit sounds and looks great. I will add to my recipe stash.
It is similar to a mixed meat loaf I make after Christmas with the left over meats. "Brawn". Your Chicken loaf will be great with a salad.
Thanks
Yes I remember my mother calling it brawn but don’t remember her adding gelatine
DeleteThanks for the simple recipe for this hot-weather dish. Looking forward to serving it tomorrow :)
ReplyDelete[Valerie, NZ]
Hope you like it, Valerie. We'd like some of your summer weather right about now!
DeleteMy Canadian grandmother regularly made this and she and I loved it!
ReplyDeleteI remember my Mom making this back in the 50's; grew up on it. I remember it being made with Thanksgiving left overs as an entree or in sandwiches. The picture looks just like I remember my Mom's.... However, I've never made it myself because back in the day, there was no internet and actually forgot about it; didn't have recipe. My heritage comes from Ukraine/Russia. It was considered "poor man's food"-- ironic how many of those foods have now become "fashionable" so to speak. Finding your recipe has now inspired my daughter to make it as well.
ReplyDeleteBack in the 50's & 60's Morrell's used to make a "jellied chicken loaf" luncheon meat and my folks and sibling took it with us on long car rides and ate the chicken loaf on tea-buns with sweet gherkin pickles. I have been trying to find somewhere to buy it, but looks like I'm going to have to try to make it myself...Thanks for the recipe.
ReplyDeleteI remember my grandmother making this. I loved it, but I never got her recipe. Thanks so much for sharing. Can't wait to make it for my family!
ReplyDeleteMarcia Adams featured jellied chicken loaf sandwiches in her Cooking from Quilt Country cookbook. My daughter got rid of my cookbooks and the library does not have it. I’d love to get the recipe back.
ReplyDeleteSorry...Myrna owned the Marcia Adams cookbook but I never found one. Maybe you should try to have your library get it for you on an interlibrary loan.
ReplyDelete