Chicken Tagine With Olives and Preserved Lemons Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Shallots New York

Adapted by Florence Fabricant

Chicken Tagine With Olives and Preserved Lemons Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour, plus marinating
Rating
5(3,279)
Notes
Read community notes

This rich and fragrant chicken stew is laden with complex flavors and spices reminiscent of the sort you might encounter in a mountainside cafe in Morocco. Save yourself the cost of a plane ticket, however, and make this at home. First, rub the chicken with a redolent combination of garlic, saffron, ground ginger, paprika, cumin, turmeric and black pepper, then pop it into the refrigerator for 3 to 4 hours to marinate. Once that's done, brown the chicken parts, and remove from the pan, making room for a pile of sliced onions that you'll sauté until golden brown. Nestle a cinnamon stick into the tangle of onions, pile the chicken parts on top and scatter with slices of preserved lemons and olives, a combination of green and kalamata. Add a bit of chicken stock and lemon juice, then cook over low heat until the chicken is cooked through, and your house smells amazing. —Florence Fabricant

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings

  • 5cloves garlic, finely chopped
  • ¼teaspoon saffron threads, pulverized
  • ½teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1teaspoon sweet paprika
  • ½teaspoon ground cumin
  • ½teaspoon turmeric
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1chicken, cut in 8 to 10 pieces
  • 2tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 3medium onions, sliced thin
  • 1cinnamon stick
  • 8calamata olives, pitted and halved
  • 8cracked green olives, pitted and halved
  • 1large or 3 small preserved lemons (sold in specialty food shops)
  • 1cup chicken stock
  • Juice of ½ lemon
  • 1tablespoon chopped flat-leaf parsley

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

779 calories; 54 grams fat; 14 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 25 grams monounsaturated fat; 11 grams polyunsaturated fat; 12 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 59 grams protein; 1037 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Chicken Tagine With Olives and Preserved Lemons Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Mix garlic, saffron, ginger, paprika, cumin and turmeric together. If not using kosher chicken, add ½ teaspoon salt. Add pepper to taste. Rub chicken with mixture, cover, refrigerate and marinate 3 to 4 hours.

  2. Heat oil in heavy skillet. Add chicken, and brown on all sides. Remove to platter. Add onions to skillet, and cook over medium-low heat about 15 minutes, until lightly browned. Transfer to tagine, if you are using one, or leave in skillet. Add cinnamon stick.

  3. Step

    3

    Put chicken on onions. Scatter with olives. Quarter the lemons, remove pulp and cut skin in strips. Scatter over chicken. Mix stock and lemon juice. Pour over chicken.

  4. Step

    4

    Cover tagine or skillet. Place over low heat, and cook about 30 minutes, until chicken is done. Scatter parsley on top, and serve.

Ratings

5

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3,279

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Michael

I've made this several times.
A few points/suggestions.
* See Paula Wolfert's "Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco" for variations.
* I know it's customary to use both saffron and turmeric in Morocco. IMO this is a mistake. Turmeric is excellent, but it's not subtle and overwhelms the saffron. Use one or the other. I use saffron.
* The recipe says discard the preserved lemon pulp. However, Paula Wolfert says she does not bother and uses the pulp. So do I.

Meri

I have made this several times. I use 6-8 chicken thighs, bone-in and skin on. After browning chicken in step 2, I remove and discard the skin, leaving flavorful fond in the skillet. Drain excess chicken fat at this point.
I increase the amount of olives, and sometimes garnish with cilantro instead of parsley. A small amount of honey, added at the end of cooking, can add balance if it's too acidic.

Nancy

"Marinating" the chicken in the spices doesn't really work. Skip this step and add the spices to the onions. (The spice rub burned in the pan while the chicken was browning.)

Pete

Cut lemons into wedges and place in a preserves jar, completely cover with salt. Wait 1 month (or longer) and you have preserved lemons.

You can add other spices and sometimes I add lemon juice to fill the jar better but that's all optional. Preserved lemons are one of the easiest things to make at home.

kathy g

I made this exactly as described a small tagine with 4 chicken thighs. Nothing burned with browning. Tumeric plus saffron as described. Delectable decadence, no honey needed. Served with rice, flat bread and a orange watercress avocado pistachio goat cheese salad with a sweetish vinaigrette. My partner could not stop moaning, yes, like that.

STA

I use skinless thighs & sometimes breasts with the rub overnight. I sauté the onions but skip browning the chicken,. Then I put everything in a heavy covered casserole & bake in the oven. Turns out great. Use home made preserved lemons, much better than what I buy in jars.

Janet S

I just made this for myself and a friend and we both really enjoyed it. I added potatoes, carrots and green beans to up the veggie quotient and some cilantro in addition to parsley at the end. Loved the preserved lemon with this! In my opinion there is no need to add honey. This recipe is definitely going into my regular rotation! I think next time I might discard the chicken skin, because I wasn't crazy about the texture of it when cooked this way.

Erin

I made this in my dutch oven. I used skinless chicken thighs, left in the lemon pulp, and prepped all of the other ingredients as directed. I baked it, covered, in the oven at 350 degrees, somewhere between 30 minutes to an hour (I think it was an hour). The chicken fell off the bone. I served this over couscous with a dollop of hummus. This reminds me of a version that I had in Marrakesh.

STA

No, you put everything in. Preserving the lemons removes the bitter taste. The peels become very soft & part of the sauce. I don't discard the pulp either. The flavor is amazing, not exactly lemony.

Julia FL

Love this dish. Used all the mentioned ingredients, but added golden raisins. Also, followed the recommendation to use thighs and not marinate, but cook the onions, garlic and spices together. I did it all on the stove top. This dish was a huge hit and will become a go to for dinner guests as it served up even better the next day. I recommend cooking it the day before and reheating for dinner guests giving you more time to enjoy your company. We served it with Jasmine rice - perfect.

Frances

This was great! I used 4 chicken thighs and 6 legs and cooked it in a 12 inch cast iron skillet. My only complaint is that the garlic on the chicken burnt by the time the chicken was browned - next time I will cook the garlic with the onions instead.

Crystal

This was phenomenal. I followed the recipe closely and took some creative license here and there (I don't measure spices). I also put a bit more stock and let it hang out on low with the lid on for a while, while I farted around the house doing Sunday things. I didn't have preserved lemon, so I used fresh lemon sliced very thinly, which I threw in with the onions. It was out of control good. I spooned it over Israeli couscous with raisins.

pickypicky

Delicious. I also left out the turmeric to favor the saffron. Slow cooked it in the oven, and used freshly ground cumin seeds. I've made many a tagine and this was up there with the best.

Paul

Add carrots and apricots, dares or prunes.Cover and put in 350 oven for 45 to 60 minutes

Maureen

Preserved lemons are really easy to make. There's a bunch of recipes out there, adding herbs etc. - just pick your fave. They are worth making, and cooking with, and very expensive to buy, so make your own!

sarah

More olives and preserved lemons Chicken strips cooked for less time

luba

Love this dish. Easy to make. I add dried apricots and prunes.

Shannon D.

I liked this well enough but didn't really get the hype around it. It was fine.

Mari

I used boneless and skinless chicken thighs as that is what I had on hand, turned out amazing. I used preserved lemons with pull with no issues, served with couscous. I think sultanas or apricots in a small dose would be a lovely addition, but can't go wrong with what's written.

Lisa

I would decrease the amount of broth. It was a bit too “liquidy”.

Ari

Great recipe! Doubled the spices for the chicken. Added a few cut up dried apricots which was really nice! Used the juice of a whole lemon. Otherwise followed the recipe exactly and it was perfect.

hz

I used an Emile Henry tagine to brown chicken and cook onions on stovetop before finishing it all in oven for 30 mins at 350. Yes - the prescribed method to coat chicken first results in burnt garlic and spices (in my case fresh ginger too). Used my preserved lemons and added carrots and a few dates. Flavors were ok but final dish was too liquidy as it lacked any thickening agent. Next time I'll follow Once Upon a Chef's version (including not coating the chicken in spices before browning)!

Catherine Hay

This was amazing! We didn't have time to marinate the chicken, but it still turned out moist and flavourful. Browning the chicken was key. We added some dried prunes and apricots, as well as the preserved lemons (including the pulp). We don't have a tagine so we used a Dutch oven. It was really fantastic.

Sam

Cooking time closer to an hourDiscard flesh from half of the preserved lemons10 olives of each typeMore apricots?Good with millet

Allison

This dish is full of magically delicious flavors! I used bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs, and also left the garlic out of the initial chicken rub and added it during the onion step. I used fresh lemons (didn't have preserved lemons but am inspired to make some now); the fresh lemons (sliced very thin so they cooked more fully) were delicious here! I served it with a cardamom-scented basmati rice with golden raisins in it - the sweetness of the raisins was perfect with the other flavors.

Kaye

I like this recipe a lot, but wanted to make a couple of points. I cook the chicken a half hour before adding olives and lemons. Also, I don't understand why the recipe calls for removing the pulp of the lemons. The whole lemon is used in any Moroccan dish I have ever had in a Middle Eastern or North African restaurant. Note to those who want to make their own preserved lemons: the lemons used in Morocco and North Africa are small. The closest you can come is Meyers lemons in the US.

Viktoria

I used skinless, boneless chicken thighs when I made this recipe. It was for a dinner with friends and not laboring over chicken bones and skin was welcome. I served it with wild rice and it was a very tasty combo.

Cambro

This recipe requires a few changes. Browning the chicken means burning the garlic and killing off the subtlety of saffron and other spices. Next time I’ll do a simple salt brine and add the spice mix to the onions instead. Also, forget about a whole chicken; use legs and thighs. Breast meat doesn’t thrive on a long simmer. Some dried figs, apricots, or similar add a welcome bit of sweetness.

LB

This was absolutely delicious! The only thing I did differently was at the very end, I removed the chicken from the stew and placed the pieces under the broiler to crisp the skin and then spooned the sauce over the chicken when I plated the dinner. The flavors were over the top.

Nia

Excellent! I was only able to marinate the meat for 30 minutes. I added zucchini and some garbanzos to make it more hearty. I served it with tomato ginger chutney.

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Chicken Tagine With Olives and Preserved Lemons Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Do you rinse preserved lemons before using? ›

For even more control, rinse the preserved lemons with cold running water to tame their salinity.

What can I do with a jar of preserved lemons? ›

Fragrant, strongly flavoured preserved lemons are well worth the wait. You can use a tiny bit each time stirred through mashed potato to serve with fish, mixed into rice for prawn curry, or in a tagine for authentic Moroccan flavour.

Can you use preserved lemons instead of fresh lemons? ›

substitute in recipes calling for fresh.) Swap out regular lemons with preserved ones in your go-to recipes for roast chicken and fish or grilled meats. For an easy weeknight meal, toss pasta with some good olive oil, a little garlic, and chopped preserved lemon peel.

Do you only use the peel of preserved lemons? ›

Both the flesh and rind of preserved lemons are edible. Preserved lemons that are cut before they're preserved will absorb more salt than those that are packed whole. Some recipes call for discarding the super-salty flesh and using only the rind or for rinsing the preserved lemon before cooking with it.

Do you refrigerate preserved lemons? ›

Once opened, a jar of preserved lemons will keep (if stored correctly in the refrigerator) up to a year. Unlike other fermented foods like kimchi or other pickles, preserved lemons aren't meant to be eaten alone. Instead they are used to season dishes, where they deliver a layered dose of salt, acid, and umami.

Can I use bottled lemon juice for preserved lemons? ›

If the juice released doesn't cover the lemons, add more freshly squeezed lemon juice (do not use water or bottled lemon juice). Close the jar and store in the refrigerator to ripen, shaking the jar every day for three to four weeks.

Do preserved lemons go bad? ›

Properly stored in the fridge, salt-preserved lemons can keep for a good 6 months. It is important to use a good canning jar with a tightly closed lid, and make sure the lemons are well submerged in the lemon juice. Some sources say they will last a good year, that may be, but I like to play it safe.

What are preserved lemons good for other than tagines? ›

Preserved lemons are the ultimate flavor booster that will elevate your home cooking! All you need are lemons, salt, a jar, and time (10-15 minutes of prep and 3 weeks to ferment). They add a brightness and depth of flavor to stews and soups, grain and legume salads, dressing, sauces, and more!

Are preserved lemons healthy? ›

Preserved lemons are fermented, which makes them a rich source of vitamin C and a healthy dose of probiotic bacteria. The fermentation process increases the already high level of vitamins. A diet rich in vitamin C is fantastic for building and sustaining the immune system.

What is the significance of preserved lemons to moroccan cuisine? ›

Preserved Lemons are incredibly versatile in the kitchen and can be used in a variety of dishes. They are a key ingredient in Moroccan cuisine, adding a distinct salty and lemony flavor to tagines, stews, and salads. The great news is you can eat the whole Preserved Lemon - rind, pulp, and all!

What is another name for preserved lemons? ›

Preserved lemon or lemon pickle is a condiment that is common in the cuisines of Indian subcontinent and Morocco. It was also found in 18th-century English cuisine. It is also known as "country lemon" and leems.

How to use preserved lemons in cooking? ›

Pop them whole into stews; add thin-sliced slivers into drinks; or mince them up for earthier pasta sauces. Before use, rinse to tame the saltiness and be sure to discard the seeds; because of the fermentation process, the rind and pith are fine to consume and will taste the same as the flesh.

What is the best salt for preserved lemons? ›

Rub kosher salt over the cut surfaces, then reshape the fruit. Cover the bottom of the jar with more kosher salt. Fit all the cut lemons in, breaking them apart if necessary. Sprinkle salt on each layer.

Can you buy preserved lemons at the grocery store? ›

Preserved lemons are available in most bigger supermarkets, but they're really easy to make at home, too. They will keep for up to a year without refrigeration.

Should you wash lemons before using them? ›

To be safe, no matter how you are eating your citrus fruits, it's always a good choice to give them a thorough clean.

Can you use the brine from preserved lemons? ›

Preserved lemons taste delicious in hummus, pesto, salsa and even guacamole. Be sure to taste as you go when adding this pungent ingredient! Either add the brine in place of some of the fresh lemon juice called for in the recipe or whir in the rind and pulp. If I have loads of brine, I'll add brine.

How to know when preserved lemons are ready? ›

Be sure to submerge the lemons so that the lemon juice covers the very top). Now, cover the jar tightly and refrigerate for 3 weeks and up to 1 month before consuming. The lemons will soften and mellow as they sit in the pickling liquid. Salt-preserved lemons will keep in the fridge for up to 6 months.

Do you have to sterilize jars for preserved lemons? ›

Wash and dry the jar and lid. You don't have to sterilize them for this recipe, because the lemons will be refrigerated, but make sure they are well cleaned and completely dry. [Optional step] – In order to make the lemon juice flow out of the cut lemons more easily, boil the lemons for 3 minutes.

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