Armando Rafael for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.
Bromelain, the group of enzymes in fresh pineapple,
is excellent at breaking down the connective tissues in thick, fibrous
chicken breasts. In this simple marinade, grated pineapple completely
alters the texture of the breast meat, resulting in something that’s
akin to luscious dark meat. Briefly marinating here is important: Leave
it too long and the chicken will fall apart during cooking, becoming
shreddy and a little gluey. Fifteen minutes is the sweet spot. The
accompanying pineapple salsa is a bright topping for the juicy morsels
of aromatic chicken and rice.
In a large bowl, stir together the brown sugar, rice
vinegar, soy sauce, fish sauce, 2 tablespoons olive oil, salt, garlic
powder, ground cayenne and black pepper. Transfer 1 tablespoon of this
marinade mixture to a separate medium bowl and add the diced pineapple,
red onion and cilantro. This is your salsa; toss until well mixed and
set aside.
Add the grated pineapple and its juices to the
marinade mixture in the large bowl, then add the chicken and toss to
coat. Set aside to marinate at room temperature for 15 minutes (and no
longer).
Once the chicken is done marinating, heat a large
nonstick skillet over medium-high and add enough olive oil to lightly
coat the bottom of the pan. Add the chicken pieces, leaving any marinade
behind, in a single layer so that they don’t touch and let cook until
the bottoms are browned, 2 to 3 minutes. Continue cooking, stirring
occasionally, until browned on all sides and no longer pink on the
inside, 4 to 5 minutes more.
Serve the chicken over rice and top with the reserved pineapple salsa.
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