Utica Chicken Riggies (Original, Chef Joe Morelli recipe) (2024)

Utica Chicken Riggies (Original, Chef Joe Morelli recipe) (1)
The famous, signature dish of Utica, NY



Italy’s sauces are many; sometimes it is a meat sauce, other times, olive oil & garlic (aglio e olio), pestos, cream or tomato sauces, augmented, depending on the time of year and what is plentiful during the season. The sauce in this dish is a very typical Piedmontese-style, spicy tomato sauce that's made with a Sherry Wine, is laden with roasted red peppers and studded with spicy, hot cherry peppers.

The name “Chicken Riggies” is a Utica, NY, colloquialism and a household name known to everyone in Central New York. And, for those that do not know, Utica, NY is so famous for its Chicken Riggies (rigatoni) that we actually have a, much publicized, annual "Riggies Fest" where people (and, restaurants) compete with their own version of the dish, and a winner is crowned every year. For a restaurant, holding that revered title, inevitably translates to a big boom in business.

Over the years, there have come to be several variations on the recipe, and truth be known, I have seen people get into full-blown debates over which restaurant (or, person) makes the best “Riggies!” Personally, I am partial to my mother's, who learned from the best, Utica's own, Chef Joe Morelli.

Recently, Utica’s "Chicken Riggies" recipe made its way to the magazine pages of “The Cook’s Illustrated- Lightened-Up Edition.” Also, a few years back, while working at Williams Sonoma's flagship store in NYC, I, personally, gave this recipe to a couple celebrity chefs in NYC, including Tyler Florence, and Rachel Ray, who featured the recipe on one of her shows, along with the famous dish, Chef Morelli's Utica Greens.

INGREDIENTS:

1 pound of Rigatoni

2 lbs. of chicken breast (cut up into small chunks)

2 large fire roasted red peppers ( from the jar and sliced into 1 inch pieces)

Bunch of hot cherry peppers, roughly chopped ( 7, or so – depending how much heat you want)

1- 28 ounce can of whole San Marzano tomatoes

Utica Chicken Riggies (Original, Chef Joe Morelli recipe) (2)
Hot cherry peppers from my garden, 2011

5 cloves of garlic (save one of the cloves to sauté chicken and peppers)

1 cup of grated Pecorino Romano cheese (plus more for topping)

1 cup of cooking Sherry wine (cut with about ½ cup of water)

2+2 tablespoons of extra-virgin olive oil (separated- half for sauté, half for sauce)

4 tablespoons of butter (half a stick)

¼ cup of heavy cream

½ teaspoon of dried basil ( plus, a few torn leaves of fresh basil for tossing in with pasta at the end)

½ teaspoon of sea salt

PREPARATION:

In a large pot heat extra-virgin olive on low heat with 4 smashed and chopped garlic cloves. This infuses the garlic into the oil before you add the tomatoes. Be careful that the garlic doesn’t get brown. It will be bitter. Add the whole tomatoes and Sherry Wine. Simmer for a few minutes. Add the butter, dried basil and the sea salt. Allow to simmer on very low heat. Meanwhile, in a skillet, saute the chicken in extra-virgin olive oil. When chicken is almost browned, stir in the roasted red peppers, the hot cherry peppers, one minced garlic clove, and sauté for a couple of minute so the flavors marry. Carefully, mash the whole tomatoes with a potato masher, then add in the Pecorino Romano cheese. (Do not add the cheese earlier, as it will stick to the bottom of the pot a little, and cling to the masher.) Toss the chicken and peppers in with the marinara sauce and simmer for 10 minutes. Prepare rigatoni al dente and toss the full pound of rigatoni in the pot with the sauce mixture. One pound of rigatoni is perfect for the amount of sauce that is prepared. Serve with additional grated cheese and red pepper flakes. Buon Appetito!

NOTA BENE:

The original Riggies recipe calls for one stick of butter, but I cut it down and supplemented with a little heavy cream, but you can experiment, if you wish. Also, some variation that I like instead of chicken are: ¼ pound of crisped prosciutto and chopped calamata olives. Or, prosciutto and peas is really good, too! Just don’t omit the roasted red peppers, that is what gives it a distinctive taste. Also, when I double this recipe, I like to use one can of crushed tomatoes and one can of whole tomatoes, then crush the whole tomatoes with a potato masher while it’s cooking. I love the chunks of tomato in the finished dish. xxoo

Utica Chicken Riggies (Original, Chef Joe Morelli recipe) (2024)

FAQs

Who made the first chicken Riggies? ›

The now-closed Chesterfield restaurant credited itself with inventing chicken riggies in 1989. But, chef Michael Geno says it happened a full decade before that, in 1979. In an interview with local radio station WIBX, Geno says he was working at the Italian restaurant Clinton House, which was located in a Utica suburb.

Why are they called chicken riggies? ›

Many agree the original recipe didn't have heavy cream, but what gave it a creamy texture was a lot of grated cheese, Doti said. As far as the name goes, Doti believes it came from customers repeating chicken rigatoni so much, the name was shortened to riggies.

Where did chicken riggies originate? ›

It typically consists of chicken, rigatoni pasta, and hot and sweet peppers, all cooked in a creamy tomato sauce loaded with grated cheese. It's a crave-able comfort food with big, bold flavors. The exact origin of the dish is a bit unclear, but it is believed to have been created in the Utica-Rome area in the '80s.

Where were chicken riggies invented? ›

Utica, New York

What is chicken riggie sauce made of? ›

Chicken riggies is made with a spiced creamy tomato-based sauce. It comes together with a can of crushed tomatoes and heavy cream that gets stirred in towards the end of cooking to thicken the sauce and add richness, which slightly tempers the heat of the hot cherry peppers.

What is chicken riggies made of? ›

This pasta dish from Utica, New York, is made with chicken, rigatoni, and hot or sweet peppers in a spicy tomato cream sauce. We used some of the brine from the jarred pickled peppers to marinate the chicken, and more to lend its punchy heat to the tomato sauce; the cream in the sauce tempers the heat of the peppers.

What was the first country to make chicken? ›

The chicken is a descendant of the Southeast Asian red jungle fowl first domesticated in India around 2000 B.C. Most of the birds raised for meat in America today are from the Cornish (a British breed) and the White Rock (a breed developed in New England).

What is the meaning of riggies? ›

“Riggies” is simply a fun, shortened word for rigatoni, which is the base of this pasta recipe. Chicken Riggies is an Italian American regional classic that hails from the Utica region of upstate New York. A number of chefs have claimed to be the creator of this spicy pasta, but the exact origins are unknown.

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