I blogged about this a couple of years ago for a Super bowl Party, but inadvertantly forgot to post the recipe, so here it is. Better late than never. The herbes en provence gave the wings a delicious flavour which paired very well with the blue cheese dip I previously made.
Ingredients:
- 1/4 cup Herbs en Province
- 3 tablespoons granulated garlic (this is so the mix remains a dry rub)
- 2 teaspoons sea salt
- 1 cup Panko (Japanese bread crumbs)
- 4 tablespoons olive oil
- 12 chicken wings
Directions:
- Pre heat oven to 375°F
- Prepare a large cookie sheet by lining with parchment paper (fold down the raw ends so they don’t burn).
- Clean up chicken wings, removing the wing tip (discard), cutting the wing into two pieces.
- Rub olive oil all over each wing piece.
- Mix the Herbs en Province, granulated garlic, sea salt and Panko in a clean zip lock bag.
- Placing 4-6 wings into the baggy and shake until each wing is well coated.
- Continue until all the wings are coated. Lay each wing individually on the prepared cookie sheet so they don’t touch.
- Bake in a hot oven for 60 minutes or until wings are 165° F Internal temperature. Turn each wing so each side is crispy!
Luks good,super-delicious.Luvly display dear.U have loads of yumm recipes here.Following u.
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Thanks Christy, welcome to my blog. Hope you enjoy it.
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Thank you Christy, welcome aboard! Hope you enjoy.
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It’s a lot more common in England to eat the stem, but in France it seems very alien to people. They sell it by the branch (as in, they get a load of bunches of celery stalks and then pull them to pieces, stick them in a bucket of water and sell each stalk individually. I have a hard time sometimes finding “complete” bunches 😀 Maybe it’s something unique to the Parisian region 😀
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Even in Hungary, they don’t seem to eat the stem! We’re getting local celery now, and although I an usually a HUGE proponent of local, our celery stalks are just not great – too woody. I’ll be switching to cucumbers for a while.
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Yummy! You know, I saw an awesome video online about how to remove all the bones from inside a chicken wing in like 2 easy steps to allow for swift eating, haha! 😀 Nice to see as well that I’m not the only one who likes munching celery – people seem to think I’m insane when I do this!
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I’ve heard that European’s think that only the root is edible! For me, it’s a ‘free’ snack that takes more calories to eat than it contains; we probably go through 3-5 bunches a week! PS, I adore the root too. The French make a raw slaw of it that I’m addicted to!
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They look fingerlicking!
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Thank you Angie! Your comments are appreciated!
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Great dry rub and I love that these wings are baked rather than deep-fired. Some days I just want to have some wings. I don’t want a deep fry mess to clean up afterward. Thanks for sharing.
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Thanks John, we rarely deep fry, so unhealthy. These wings maintain the crispy texture on the skin, but moist and so flavourful inside.
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Great idea to use the Herbs en Provence! I have a container of it that I haven’t really used much of! 🙂
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Oh my, Lorraine, that mix never lasts long at our house. I can hardly wait for our layover in Charles de Gaulle airport, I’m hoping to find my favourite mix from the food gallery at Galleries Lafayette!
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I love herbes de Provence! These chicken wings look delicious Eva!
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Thanks Manu. We love to pair HdeP with chicken, they are a perfect match.
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Herbs De Provence are wonderful. How great to use them with wings. Will be making this for sure!
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Thanks Erin. We really enjoyed them.
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Eva, this is a GREAT idea! What a delicious twist on an old classic! So far, the only “twisting” I’ve done with wings is add Soy and Honey to the buffalo sauce, then shred chicken and make a slider.
This is such an elegant way to serve them! I bet they were AMAZING!
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Thank you Ann. They were so delicious. If it wasn’t for the fat content of wings, I’d probably make these once a week!
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Oh I don’t use a lot of dried garlic, but am imagining it’d be great in this. Give it a good kick.
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Neither do I Greg, but I wanted it to stay a dry rub. Granulated garlic is quite different than garlic salt…I wouldn’t use garlic salt – I like to control my own salt.
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Just in time for football season! 🙂 These look great.
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A twist on the ordinary wing, Kristy. More of an adult flavour!
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Looks delicious – love chicken wings!
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Thanks Tanya, they were indeed very tasty!
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