Tuesday, September 21, 2010

recipe: Fran's Chicken

I like to cook, I like to eat, I like to share, I like to travel, and I like to feed people. When I go visiting I tend to cook my hosts dinner as a guest-gift (a gift given to thank one's host for her generosity, time, and trouble). “Tend to” as I do have a few friends who view such a practice as slightly less insulting than certain Italian hand gestures, because guests should not lift a finger, or their kitchens are sacred, or, more usually, a combination of both. (Gifts of chocolate, peanut brittle, books, and wine are then more appropriate.) When in doubt, bring the recipe and offer to do the shopping.

I tend to make this as a guest-gift more than any other single dish. We've eaten it on Christmas day and we've eaten it on Tuesday. I've grown up with this, though we don't make it as often any more. I'm not sure why.

This is a recipe from before I was born. Through a series of recipe exchanges my grandmother got it from someone at bridge, who got it from someone at church, who got it from someone else, who got it from Fran. I used to think it was my other (paternal) grandmother's recipe because her name is Fran, and with the kind of trusting assumptions that children are made of I never made the connection that my maternal grandmother made it all the time, and that my maternal and paternal grandmothers do not... precisely... associate. At all.

There are two versions of Fran's Chicken here, the first taken verbatim off the recipe card, and the second how I usually make it these days, complete with my “usual flair.” I hope you enjoy it, and that you make it in the spirit of hospitality.

Fran's Chicken

card version (verbatim, so don't come whining to me about “some” or “what size package?”)
(note: the recipe card says “Mexican chicken.” This recipe is very 1960s Southern-California housewife and as such is about as Mexican as Taco Bell.)

1 pkg corn tortillas (sliced into strips)
1 can whole green chiles (strips)
1 lb cheddar cheese grated
1 whole chicken, cooked, torn into pieces
1 can cream of chicken soup
6oz can salsa
1 chopped med onion

Mix soup, salsa, onion, & milk if too thick.
Pour a little sauce into a 9x13 pan, layer w/ tortillas, chicken, chiles, salsa, cheese. Repeat. Cook 30 to 40 minutes at 350ºF.

Stephanie's version
(evolved from the card above, then reverse-engineered from pouring freehand into a reasonably-followable recipe)


  • 10-15 taco size corn tortillas which, if you're at my house, are likely to be frozen hard enough to be used as garden pavers
  • 2 2.5oz cans diced roasted green chiles, or ½ cup fresh roasted mild chiles, skinned and diced, or whatever combination of same gives you chiles. Or use 1 can of chiles. Or omit the chiles completely if you're one of those people.
  • Sufficient shredded cheese for your personal tastes, yes, I know this is leaving it really open. I tend to use ½ to ¾ of a pound, if it's block cheese and I'm grating it, or purchase a package of pre-shredded cheese and use the mysterious “enough.”
  • Your favorite salsa, enough to get 1 to 1 ½ cups out of plus more for topping at the table
  • 1 med to med-large onion, chopped
  • Either one whole chicken cooked, dismembered, and torn into little pieces (tastes best); or 2 to 4 cooked chicken breasts, chopped or torn; or whatever assemblage of chicken parts or mild-flavored, preferably-bird-based meat comes out to the right amount. If you use tofu you are not allowed to call it “Fran's Chicken,” or even “Fran's Tofu.” Being a 1950s housewife I rather expect Fran would be deeply suspicious of tofu.
  • 1 ½ cups cream of chicken soup, or one can if you are using canned, or chicken broth if you've neglected to plan.
  • ¼ teaspoon ground cumin
  • ½ teaspoon ground turmeric
  • ¾ teaspoon salt (only if you are NOT using canned soup)
  • ¼ teaspoon black pepper
  • ½ teaspoon paprika
  • Sour cream for topping at the table
  • Sliced olives for topping at the table
  • chopped green onion for garnish, if so desired
  • 1 cup chopped tomatoes if so desired



  1. Finish dismembering the chicken, if necessary, while the tortillas are thawing in the microwave. Slice the tortillas into strips. Finish any other necessary slicing, as a matter of fact. We'll wait.
  2. Make the cream of chicken soup, if that's what you've got to do.
  3. Mix the onion, cream of chicken soup, 1 or 1 ½ cup (depending on your tastes) salsa, and spices together. Taste and adjust seasonings if you feel competent to do so.
  4. Decide on how many layers you're going for. You can manage two layers if you're generous, three if you're scanty with the toppings, and four if you're my grandmother. Three makes a “sturdier” casserole than two. Portion the various ingredients for layering (chicken, chiles, cheese, sauce, and tomatoes if you're using them) out into “layer groupings” now if you think it'll help. You'll need one portion of sauce per layer, plus one. Me, I always fail to plan. It comes out even in the oven anyway. Oven!
  5. (optional) Remember that you need to preheat the oven. Turn it to 350ºF
  6. Pour some (SEE, YOU CAN'T GET AWAY FROM “SOME”... oh, all right, all right FINE. 1/2 cup.) of the sauce in the bottom of your pan. Typical pan is 9x13 (inches, though I'd really like to see 9x13 meters if you can manage), your mileage may vary. When in doubt, go larger, or split it between two smaller pans.
  7. Layer tortilla strips over the sauce in as CDO (or lack thereof) a fashion as you see fit. Any particularly spectacular examples of tortilla mosaic are totally “pics or it didn't happen.”
  8. Layer up your remaining ingredients as follows, until you run out: chicken, chiles (and/or maybe tomatoes), sauce, cheese, tortillas.
  9. Pour in the last of your sauce, if you've any left, and top the entire affair with cheese.
  10. Place it in the oven. If you've neglected the optional step 5, remembering to preheat the oven, turn your ovens to 350ºF now, and set the timer for 40 minutes, 30-35 minutes if you've preheated, and whatever time you deem best if you've been with your oven for years now and know each others' peculiarities. Don't be alarmed if it boils over, because if you were quite generous with your layering, it probably will. If you are me, you will always forget this until after you open the oven.
  11. Remove the casserole from the oven and allow to cool slightly before serving. Serve with olives, and sour cream, if desired, and green onions or tomatoes if you're using them and didn't want to bake them in. If you're fancy, accompany with salad and/or a vegetable. Eat with friends.

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