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Ruby Tuesday's Buffalo Chicken Wontons

Mama Mangia

Super Moderator
Ruby Tuesday's Buffalo Chicken Wontons

12 wonton wrappers, cut into quarters
2 tablespoons vegetable oil, to brush on wontons
6 cups water, to boil chicken
1 lb. boneless skinless chicken breasts
6 tablespoons Louisiana hot sauce
2 teaspoons liquid margarine
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder
salt
blue cheese dressing
celery (to garnish)

Preheat the oven to 325F. Place the wonton wrappers on a work surface and brush lightly with the oil. Mold the wontons, oiled-side up, into the bottoms of miniature (1-inch) muffin tins.

Bake until light brown, about 5 minutes. Remove from oven, let cool slightly and remove from the muffin tins. Cool on a wire rack. Place on a baking sheet and cover tightly with plastic wrap until ready to assemble.

Cook the chicken at a simmer until cooked through, about 12 minutes. Cool the chicken slightly, then finely chop and shred with a fork. Season with a little salt.

In a medium bowl mix together the Hot Sauce, liquid margarine, garlic powder, and cayenne pepper. Add the chicken and mix well. Refrigerate until slightly chilled.

To assemble: Place 1 heaping teaspoon of the chicken mixture in each wonton cup and garnish with bleu cheese dressing and crunchy celery sticks for dipping. Serve at room temperature.
 
I think this would be an excellent recipe to use canned chicken, which is already cooked, whether home-canned or commercial.
 
I used leftover chicken that was frozen and thawed - it was a time-saver for me - plus I got to use up leftovers.
 
I stick to butter - but the sad thing - restaurants use that liquid chemical crap and call it liquid margarine - butter is better. Butter comes from cream - straight from the cow - and I trust the cows more than I trust food processing facilities. Yes, I have read it all and all the pros and cons of the butter vs margarine posts - but today's margarine is not like the margarine from years ago either - so I'll stick to butter.
 
This sounds interesting. Anyway, butter and other types of food processing facilities does not matter most when you'll first to try new recipe. When I have done it right, that is the time I'll look for which I can make an alternative to make it better, safer and healthier dishes. Just my point. :)
 
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