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Ecuadorian seco de pollo or chicken stew

Seco de pollo or seco de gallina is an Ecuadorian chicken stew cooked slowly in a sauce of beer, naranjilla, onions, garlic, peppers, tomatoes, herbs, and spices.

Ecuadorian chicken stew with yellow achiote rice, fried ripe plantains and avocado

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Seco de pollo or chicken stew is another delicious recipe from Ecuador. It is one of dishes that you crave on a day when you want a nice home-cooked meal. It’s the type of meal that not only satisfies your stomach but also gives you that overall happy satisfied soul feeling. This dish is also known as seco de gallina criolla.

If it is made with a young chicken it is called seco de pollo, and if it is made with an older hen it is called seco de gallina criolla. Traditionally, it was a way to cook those older tougher hens and soften the meat by cooking it slowly in a sauce of onions, garlic, peppers, tomatoes, herbs and spices.

Ecuadorian seco de pollo chicken stew with yellow achiote rice, fried ripe plantains and avocado

The traditional preparation also uses chicha – a fermented corn drink – instead of beer, though most people today prepare it with beer because it is much easier to find and tastes great. Sometimes naranjilla juice is also added. I recommend using a light and mild-flavored beer, if not the flavor might be on the bitter side.

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If that happens, you can offset the bitterness by adding some citrus (orange, sour orange, lemon/lime, naranjilla/lulo juice) until you have the right balance. You can also use a mix of beer and citrus juice, like naranjilla or lulo juice.  Other options for the liquid include a mix of half white wine and half orange juice.  I find the flavor of chicha similar to a semi-dry apple cider, so apple cider is also another alternative to beer for this recipe.

Ecuadorian seco de pollo or chicken stew

Seco de pollo is an easy recipe to make, but it can be time-consuming if you are cooking a hen or gallina, since you have to wait for the chicken meat to get very tender – about 2 to 2 1/2 hours. My mom usually makes it in the pressure cooker if she’s making it the traditional way with an older hen.

Recipe for Ecuadorian seco de pollo

A regular pollo or young chicken will cook much quicker, but the sauce might need more time to thicken. In that case, I recommend removing the chicken pieces and increasing the heat to thicken the sauce quickly. Seco de pollo is usually served with arroz amarillo or yellow rice -just add some achiote to the rice preparation -and fried ripe plantains. Those are the two must-have sides. I also like to serve it with avocado slices, a small salad, and if you need extra starch some whole potatoes sauteed in butter. 

Video Recipe

Ecuadorian chicken stew cooked in beer sauce
Ecuadorian seco de pollo chicken stew with yellow achiote rice, fried ripe plantains and avocado

Seco de pollo {Ecuadorian chicken stew}

Seco de pollo or seco de gallina is an Ecuadorian chicken stew cooked slowly in a sauce of beer (or chicha), naranjilla juice, onions, garlic, peppers, tomatoes, herbs and spices.
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Course: Main dish
Cuisine: Ecuadorian, Latin American
Keyword: Beer, Chicha, Chicken, Chicken stew, Comfort food, Naranjilla, Seco de pollo
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Servings: 8

Ingredients

  • 4 to 5 lbs of assorted chicken pieces
  • 2 teaspoons of ground cumin
  • 2 tsp ground achiote or annatto can also use paprika (if you can’t find ground achiote you can use the seeds, they will need to be simmered in the oil until they release their color)
  • 2 to 3 tablespoons of oil
  • 1 onion cut into chunks
  • 6 to 8 garlic cloves
  • 1 to 2 cups of beer or chicken broth/wine/chicha
  • 1 cup of naranjilla lulo juice, can use the frozen concentrate (can be replaced with fresh orange juice as an alternative)
  • 4- 6 tomatoes 1 pound, quartered
  • 2 bell peppers seeds removed and cut into chunks
  • Optional: 1 aji or hot pepper jalapeno or serrano, can also use chili powder
  • 1 bunch cilantro reserve some to chop finely to add at the end
  • 1 bunch parsley leaves only, reserve some to chop finely and add at the end
  • 2 tsp dry oregano or 2-3 fresh oregano sprigs
  • Juice of 1 orange optional
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Side dishes

Instructions

  • Rub the chicken pieces with the ground achiote, cumin, salt and pepper.
  • Blend the beer and the naranjilla juice with the onion chunks, whole garlic cloves, tomatoes, bell peppers, hot pepper, cilantro, parsley, oregano to obtain a smooth sauce or puree.
  • Heat the oil and brown the chicken pieces.
  • Pour the blended beer vegetable mix over the chicken. Bring to a boil.
  • Reduce the heat and cook on low for about an hour (if you were using an old hen it would take longer, but most supermarket chicken will be tender in an hour or less).
  • If the chicken is tender, but sauce isn’t thick yet, then remove the cooked chicken pieces, turn up the heat and cook the sauce until it’s nice and thick, about 10 to 15 minutes. At this point I also like to taste the sauce and adjust salt/spices, if the flavor is slightly bitter from the beer you can neutralize it by adding some freshly squeezed orange juice/lemon juice. Once the sauce has thickened add the chicken pieces back to the pot and mix in the remaining chopped cilantro and parsley.
  • Serve with arroz amarillo or yellow rice and fried ripe plantains. Can also be served with avocado and a small salad.
Ecuadorian chicken stew
Chicken stew cooked in beer with achiote rice, plantains and avocado

Side dish recipes:

Arroz amarillo or yellow rice

Fried ripe plantains

Whole potatoes sauteed in butter

Preparation photos for Ecuadorian seco de pollo chicken stew:

Cilantro and parsley for seco de pollo
Seco de pollo preparation
Seco de pollo with side dishes
Seco de pollo or seco de gallina
Seco de pollo recipe
Seco de pollo or chicken stew
Seco de pollo or Ecuadorian chicken stew
Chicken stew or seco de gallina
Seco de pollo or chicken stew

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Beef stew in tamarind sauce {Seco de carne con tamarindo}
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{Fritada de gallina} Ecuadorian chicha braised chicken
Fritada de gallina is a delicious and tender Ecuadorian chicken dish prepared by cooking chicken in a sauce made with chicha or fermented corn drink, garlic, onion and cumin until the liquid is gone and the chicken is golden brown. Adapted from Michelle O. Fried’s Comidas del Ecuador: Recetas Tradicionales para Gente de Hoy
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Braised goat stew {Ecuadorian seco de chivo}
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66 Comments

  1. Laylita-

    I literally JUST finished eating this dish, with the arroz amarillo and platanos masduro as you suggested, and it was DELICIOUS! My ex-boyfriend is from Ecuador, and his mother made this stew for me one day and I fell in love with it. Now I can make it myself. Very good!

  2. Hi Laylita! My girlfriend and I tried this over the weekend, to eat with football. I made it with Corona, and it came out spectacular. I also added a touch of my own: Chunky tomatoes and mushrooms, added right near the end of the cooking process. I look forward to trying just about everything on your site!

  3. How can I incorporate naranjilla into this recipe? I have frozen concentrate

    Mari – Just replace some of the beer with the naranjilla juice.

  4. Wow! The flavor is incredible. My Ecuadorean Grandmother used to make this dish when I was little. She is still alive but no longer cooks like she used to. I am so thankful to have found this recipe. The taste brings back so many memories!

  5. Hi Layla,
    Thank you so much for the wonderful recipe… I made it last night for my family and boyfriend and they loved it, also did a twist on it and took the chicken off the bone, so shredded chicken basically and mixed it with spaghetti pasta and it came out real yummy! My mom, originally from Ecuador was very impressed! she won’t admit it but maybe it was even a little better than hers…. haha :))) Thank you! and keep em coming!

  6. hi Layla,

    I made this dish last night, and it was amazing. Even my cats went crazy for it. I have tried many recipes from the Food Network, and magazines, and you never know what you are going to end up with–your recipes are right on, they taste incredible. When my partner was flattering my cooking, i said to him, i wish i could take credit for this, but it isn’t my recipe. I told him about you. Anyways, thanks again.

    maria
    p.s. my next recipe was supposed to be Guatita, but i can’t find a spanish meat place. I’ll keep looking.

  7. Hi Laylita – I made the chicken stew using corona and it was delicious, I had made chicken stew before but never with beer. My husband and the boys loved it. I served it with yellow rice and fried sweet plantains. When my mom comes to visit next time I’ll make it for her. She never used beer to make stew. I already tried your recipes for ceviche de camaron, carne en palito y menestra de lenteja, and everything was delicious. I LOVED the ceviche. Just like the ones I used to eat in Salinas. Thanks for your great recipes! I refered your website to my sister and she’s very excited about it, she also already made carne en palito. When she visits me next time we will make ceviche the pescado for the both of us. Our american husbands find it too acidic for their taste. I hope that if you have a good recipe for caldo de bola, you post it soon. Bye!

  8. Hi Thalia – I use either something light or medium, a pilsner type beer is typically used in Ecuador. I’ve made it with Corona, Hoegaarden white beer, Stella and also with Heineken (but this last one was slightly on the bitter side).

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