Meat & Poultry Chicken Healthy Chicken Main Dish Recipes Healthy Chicken Pasta Recipes Agrodolce Zucchini & Chicken Pasta 5.0 (1) 1 Review Replacing some of the pasta with spiralized zucchini allows for a totally twirlable dish with all the pleasure of noodles. The light lemony sauce and savory shredded chicken are comfort food at its finest, and a sweet-and-sour topping provides crunch, chew, herbal brightness and a palate awakener. By Stacey Ballis Stacey Ballis Stacey Ballis is the author of ten novels of culinary fiction including, Off the Menu, Out to Lunch, Recipe for Disaster, Wedding Girl and How to Change a Life as well as a digital cookbook, Big Delicious Life. Her nonfiction essays have appeared in several anthologies, and her food writings and recipes have appeared in Food & Wine Magazine, EatingWell Magazine, The Chicago Tribune, Bake From Scratch Magazine, Plate Magazine, MyRecipes.com, ExtraCrispy.com, TheTakeout.com, AllRecipes.com, and a recipe of hers was adapted for use in The New York Times. She was the recipe developer and culinary consultant for The Self-Care Cookbook by Frank Ardito. Stacey lives in Chicago with her husband and is currently at work on a new full-length work of fiction. EatingWell's Editorial Guidelines Published on March 1, 2024 Tested by Hilary Meyer Tested by Hilary Meyer Hilary Meyer is a freelance recipe developer, tester and content creator. After graduating from culinary school, she started working as a freelancer in the EatingWell Test Kitchen in 2006, developing and testing recipes. Meet the EatingWell Test Kitchen Reviewed by Dietitian Emily Lachtrupp, M.S., RD Reviewed by Dietitian Emily Lachtrupp, M.S., RD Emily Lachtrupp is a registered dietitian experienced in nutritional counseling, recipe analysis and meal plans. She's worked with clients who struggle with diabetes, weight loss, digestive issues and more. In her spare time, you can find her enjoying all that Vermont has to offer with her family and her dog, Winston. EatingWell's Editorial Guidelines Rate PRINT Share Trending Videos Close this video player Photo: Ali Redmond Active Time: 45 mins Total Time: 45 mins Servings: 4 Nutrition Profile: Sesame-Free Diabetes-Appropriate Soy-Free Heart-Healthy High-Protein Egg-Free When I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes a decade ago, it devastated me. As a passionate cook and eater, someone who was connected to food both personally and professionally, it sounded like an end to pleasure was being leveled at me, and a life of sad denial of my favorite foods. Many people I know feel this way at first, in part because often discussions of eating and diet for T2D folks are all about what you cannot or should not have, “bad” foods and “good” foods, or “red” foods and “green” foods, and not nearly as much about how to effectively create a relationship with food that uses smart moderation to help you stay healthfully and joyfully in your new lane. If nothing else, know that there is not a single food on the planet you cannot eat in moderation as a person with type 2 diabetes. Not one. You just have to find out what sort of moderation your body needs. While everyone needs to listen to their medical team, and watch their numbers and make adjustments to their diet accordingly, I found that I was able to make some changes that have allowed me to effectively and successfully manage my diabetes without living a life bereft of wonderful foods. My husband, too, was diagnosed a couple of years after I was, and so our life together is aligned in staying healthy. Perhaps the single smartest thing I did for me, and then for us, was to focus on balance, not just within meals, but within dishes. I am not the type of eater to get the same deep pleasure from a cauliflower pizza crust as I am from one made of actual bread dough. I also could not imagine a life without pizza. My solution? I learned to make pizza dough at home using my sourdough starter, and I let the dough slowly ferment in my fridge for at least five days before making pizza, so that the wild yeasts can eat all the readily available sugars and convert the dough to a lower-glycemic version. Yay, science! I also learned to stretch that dough much thinner and, most importantly, to eat less of the end results. Turns out, a couple of slices of a super-thin-crust homemade pizza with a salad is very satisfying to me, much more so than twice as much of a purchased low-carb pizza-like product. The first trick I share with anyone who is newly diagnosed is my carb reduction method. Take a high-carb dish you love and think about smart ways to reduce the carb load. I always begin with swapping out half and then adjusting up or down to tweak the flavor and satisfaction, and then adjust my portion sizes accordingly. Are you a lasagna fiend? Sub out half of the noodles with layers of thinly sliced eggplant and you have halved the carb intake on an identical portion size—and I promise you won’t miss it. Love fried rice? Swap out half of the rice for riced cauliflower for the volume you want without it being as carb-laden. This mantra can be an essential tool for last-minute or weeknight meals. When you want to get dinner on the table fast or, let’s be real, dinner in a bowl on your lap in front of the TV even faster, carbs tend to be the go-to when you want something speedy. One of my longtime favorite dishes was inspired by a dish I had in Italy: shredded roasted chicken tossed with pasta, fried zucchini and lemon, and topped with toasted pine nuts and golden raisins. It is a zingy dish full of pops of flavor, bright sunny lemon, sweet raisins, savory chicken, grassy herbal notes and little nutty crunchies. Big bowls of pasta are a thing of the past for me, but I realized that by shifting the zucchini from fried rounds to spiralized strands, I could reduce the pasta amount by over half, and still have a satisfactory twirlable forkful of yum. Using a third of the original volume of raisins, chopped so as to go further with fewer, and increasing the chicken for a satiating protein boost (plus choosing a store-bought rotisserie instead of roasting it myself), and the meal is simple enough for a busy Tuesday, deeply delicious and completely within my carb boundaries. A one-dish meal, it even leaves room for us to have a small glass of wine with it if we like. And since the recipe now serves four instead of two, I pack up half as soon as it is finished cooking so that we have lunch for the next day. Ali Redmond Ingredients 1 pound spiralized zucchini noodles (about 5 cups) 6 ounces whole-wheat linguine, spaghetti or other long strand pasta 1/4 cup golden raisins, coarsely chopped 1 tablespoon cider vinegar 1 tablespoon unsalted chicken broth plus 1/2 cup, divided 1/4 cup toasted pine nuts 2 tablespoons coarsely chopped flat-leaf parsley 1 tablespoon chopped fresh chives 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil 1 small shallot, minced, or 1/4 cup minced red onion 12 ounces shredded skinless rotisserie chicken Pinch of crushed red pepper 1/4 cup dry white wine or dry vermouth 1 tablespoon grated lemon zest 1/4 cup lemon juice 1 tablespoon unsalted butter 1/4 teaspoon salt Ground pepper to taste 1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese Directions Bring a large pot of water to a boil over high heat. Place zucchini in a large colander in the sink. Add pasta to the boiling water; cook according to package directions. Reserve 1/2 cup pasta-cooking water, then drain the pasta over the zucchini. Gently toss to combine and let stand until the zucchini softens, about 2 minutes. Meanwhile, combine raisins, vinegar and 1 tablespoon broth in a small bowl. Microwave for 1 minute. Stir in pine nuts, parsley and chives. Ali Redmond Heat oil in a large pot over medium-high heat. Add shallot (or onion); cook, stirring, until translucent, about 1 minute. Add chicken and crushed red pepper; cook, stirring occasionally, until lightly browned with some crisping on the edges, about 3 minutes. Add wine (or vermouth); cook, scraping up the browned bits from the bottom of the pan, until mostly evaporated, about 30 seconds. Add lemon zest, lemon juice and the remaining 1/2 cup broth; bring to a simmer. Remove from heat, add butter and stir gently until it melts. Add 1/4 teaspoon salt and pepper to taste. Ali Redmond Transfer the pasta and zucchini to the pot with the sauce and toss gently to combine. If the pasta mixture seems dry, add some of the reserved pasta water. Season with more pepper, if desired. Serve topped with the raisin mixture and Parmesan. Ali Redmond Nutrition Information Serving Size: 1 3/4 cupsCalories 470, Fat 16g, Saturated Fat 4g, Cholesterol 85mg, Carbohydrates 47g, Total sugars 10g, Added sugars 0g, Protein 34g, Fiber 2g, Sodium 523mg, Potassium 943mg EatingWell.com, March 2024 Rate It Print