It’s been an incredibly difficult year and it doesn’t appear to be getting better anytime soon. However, for the ever hopeful Jewish People, the High Holidays are once again upon us. It is a time of reflection, repentance and most of all – hope for a better future. It is a time to gather with our family and community and like most Jewish holidays, it is a time to eat foods that are both delicious and symbolic. This Sweet and Spicy Harvest Chicken is a perfect representation of the pilgrimage holiday of Sukkot or the Feast of Booths.
Sukkot is our fall harvest festival that also commemorates the 40 years the Jewish People spent in the desert on our way to the Promised Land (Eretz Yisrael) after escaping slavery in Egypt. The Sukkah that many Jews build and enjoy meals in, reminds us of the temporary dwellings that we Jews lived in while wandering in the desert.
While this Sweet and Spicy Harvest Chicken is perfect for Sukkot, there is no reason to limit eating it to only once a year. Simple to prepare and visually beautiful, this dish can be enjoyed for any Shabbat meal or Sunday dinner. Serve it over your favorite grain with lots of salatim on the side for your own harvest feast.
This chicken is tender, juicy, sweet and just spicy enough. While you could use chicken breasts, I do not advise it. It is too easy to over bake them and then you end up with tough, dry and rubbery chicken. It is almost impossible to ruin the chicken thighs and drumsticks and they are more flavorful. My store didn’t carry what we used to call chicken saddles, meaning the drumstick attached to the thigh. But it generally is easy enough to find bone-in, skin on thighs and drumsticks separately. You could, of course, use all of one or the other should you choose.
Normally I would serve this with some delicious grain (almost any would work) but my husband makes the absolute best challah and so we will use that to soak up all of the yummy sauce. This recipe will serve 4 to 6 people depending on sides, but you can easily increase the amounts. And left-overs are also delicious.
May you have a sweet, good and peaceful New Year!
לשנה טובה תכתב ותחתם
Due to the unprovoked, criminal and seemingly endless brutal war of annihilation against Israeli and Palestinian civilians by Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis and against the Ukrainians by Vladimir Putin and the worsening humanitarian crisis, please consider helping by following the links below. There are a number of reputable aid agencies from which to choose. Many of these agencies will also help victims suffering the devastating effects of natural disasters. This list is not exhaustive but is a good place to start.
Recipe
Yield: 4 to 6 servings
Ingredients
About 3 pounds of bone-in, skin on chicken thighs and drumsticks
About 4 cups of any dried fruit (Apricots, prunes, pears, peaches, figs – I like to use a mixture, depending on what I have on hand.)
9 to 10 fat garlic cloves, lightly smashed
3 Tablespoons Za’atar
2 Tablespoons of EVOO or Avocado oil
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 to 2 Tablespoons of red harissa (depending on your tolerance for heat)
1/4 teaspoon of Aleppo or fresh cracked black pepper
2/3 cup of dry red wine
1/3 cup of honey
Directions
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
Scatter the dried fruit and garlic cloves in the bottom of a baking dish that is about 9″ X 13″ and 3-inches deep.
In a smallish bowl, mix together the za’atar, oil, harissa, pepper and salt. Massage this mixture into the chicken pieces on both sides. Then lay the chicken, skin side up on top of the fruit and garlic in a single layer.
Pour the wine around the chicken and cover tightly with foil over waxed paper or parchment. Bake for 1 hour.
Remove the foil and waxed paper and drizzle the honey over the top of the chicken. Place the chicken back into the oven of 30 to 40 more minutes, basting two or three times until the skin of the chicken has a beautiful lacquered look.












