Hawaiian BBQ Slow Cooker Chicken
This is an easy recipe that you can just throw all together in a slow cooker and 3 or so hours later it is done. You can serve each chicken piece whole with a side of rice, or make it into a sandwich. I shredded…
This is an easy recipe that you can just throw all together in a slow cooker and 3 or so hours later it is done. You can serve each chicken piece whole with a side of rice, or make it into a sandwich. I shredded…
If you have been to Greece you know that they love their tomato based red sauce dishes. You can find just about any fish, meat or veggie cooked in tomato sauce and served on it’s own with some yummy warm bread, to slop the sauce…
Okay, I have to believe that most of you reading this have had a souvlaki sandwich, or maybe the more popular version in America-the gyro sandwich. Or…at least some form of sandwich that involves stuffing pita bread and wrapping it up! If not, well you need to try it…it is wonderful.
A VERY popular fast/street food in Greece is souvlaki or gyro sandwich. What is the difference between souvlaki and gyro? It’s in the way the meat is prepared and cut.
Souvlaki is made with pieces/chunks of seasoned meat (normally pork or chicken but you can use beef or lamb, as well) put on a skewer and grilled, then you put it on your pita, pull out the skewer and top it with your favorite traditional ingredients, such as tzatziki (that lovely cucumber yogurt sauce), sliced raw onions, fried potatoes, a mayo sauce and/or tomatoes.
Gyro is also usually pork or chicken but can be beef or lamb, too. You layer the meat on a rotisserie and then slowly cook and then shave the meat off, and like the souvlaki in pita, you can top it with the same yummy ingredients listed above.
My favorite version is the pork souvlaki in pita. In Greece, the pork used is a little fatty, but when they grill it the fat crisps up and tastes SOOOO good, especially when they dip it right at the end in a lemon, olive oil, oregano marinade…oh, so yummy. Of course, if you prefer to limit fats in your diet you can use pork tenderloin or any leaner type of meat. But for me, it’s okay to indulge in fat every so often 🙂 .
And since we are also talking about pita, let me tell you the two kinds. There is the oven baked and the hot pan cooked types. I prefer the pita bread that is cooked on a hot surface, such as a cast iron skillet. It’s softer, spongier and pulls apart nicely when you take that yummy bite…it is more like the pita you find in Greece…in some stores it is actually called Greek Pita.
The other type of pita is the oven baked version. This one is the one that usually forms a pocket and it is great if you want to stuff it. This is also the one you mostly find in stores. It’s a lot firmer and chewier when you take that bite. If you can find both in your store, go for the Greek version. If not, that sandwich will still taste wonderful with the baked version!
So, since I usually cook for A LOT of people (Greek families are huge, with a million cousins with the same name…yes, if you have seen “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” or have visited Greece, you know this is true!) Anyway, since I cook a whole bunch of meat I just forego the skewering portion and grill the chunks on a grill or in a cast iron skillet until done to the appropriate internal temperature (depending on your meat) and then turn up the heat just a little to get the pieces a little crispy on the edges. If you prefer, you can also broil your pieces in the oven, but make sure you are checking on them and turning the pieces every few minutes.
Okay, for today, we are going to make pork and chicken souvlaki in pita. You remember all the toppings I listed above that you can pile onto your sandwich, well, you can use any combination, but traditionally, the pork souvlaki in pita has tzatziki, onions and tomatoes on it and the chicken version has a mayo based sauce, onions, tomatoes and fried potatoes piled onto it and then wrapped up. Crumbled feta would also be good in any of these! Use your instincts, follow your heart 🙂 .
Also, if you want a nice tender piece of meat, when you bite into it, make sure you marinade the meat for at least 3 hours, overnight is even better. The lemon and the salt breaks down the meat and makes it tender. If you only have 30 minutes then that is okay…the flavor will still be there but the meat may not be as tender. Alright, let’s do this!
You just need:
Steps:
Kali Orexi!