
What you'll need:
- 1 1/2 lbs. skinless, boneless chicken (I used thighs because they're cheaper and I like dark meat) (should be about 4 pieces)
- One onion
- 5 limes
- Olive oil (a couple tablespoons' worth)
- One bunch of cilantro
- Dried oregano
- Salt and pepper
- Black beans (32-ounce can - you may use less; would probably be even better if you made the black beans from scratch, but this is a time saver)
- 1 quart of water (4 cups, for those of us who are conversionally challenged)
- Bay leaves
- Garlic (4 cloves)
- Extra herbs/spices for the black beans: for example, cayenne, paprika, thyme, saffron (whatever's lying around that would taste good)
Squeeze all the limes into a large bowl. Chop up the cilantro leaves, leaving the stems (should be 1/2-1 cup). Add a couple tablespoons of olive oil and a couple dashes each of oregano, salt and pepper. Stir, then add the chicken to the marinade. Either let the marinade sit for 2 hours at room temperature or stick in the fridge to marinate overnight. Remember to turn the pieces of chicken occasionally.

Preparing the bean sauce
It's almost better to conceptualize this as a bean soup. Empty the can of black beans (or fresh black beans, if you're good) into a large pot. Add a quart of water (4 cups) and start heating (on high heat). Finely chop the cilantro stems and add to the beans. Add 4 or 5 bay leaves, 4 cloves pressed garlic, and whatever herbs/spices you choose (I added cayenne and paprika, which made it pretty spicy). Stir.

Once it comes to a boil, bring it down to a simmer for 1-1.5 hours. Remember to keep stirring as it reduces and be especially careful to keep parts of the bean sauce from crusting on the sides.

Once the beans have reduced to a level you're happy with, add them to a blender or a food processor and mix. I actually might have tried mashing the beans if I had a masher, but I settled for blending since mashing is something we don't partake in enough to warrant buying yet another kitchen gadget. (Not that we don't love them.)

Baking the chicken, onions and marinade
Preheat the oven to 350 (the standard meat-cooking temp, I am learning). Slice up an onion (so that you have several long pieces) and make it a bed in the bottom of a baking dish. Add the marinated chicken thighs and drizzle the marinade over everything. Bake for 15 minutes. Remove.

Place the chicken thighs on a separate plate. Bake the remaining onions and the marinade by placing them back in the oven to soften the onions (and also allow the onions to absorb some more flavor).
Grilling the chicken
Pretty self-explanatory. This would probably work much better with an outside grill. Our little grill pan leaves a lot of smoke. It would have tasted better to slowly add (now-baked) marinade over the chicken as it cooked, but I only added a little bit to prevent smoking out the apartment. Cook the chicken on each side for about 5 minutes each. I have a tendency to overcook because I am still learning the ropes and prefer over- to undercooking and really don't mind a well-browned piece of chicken.

Once the chicken is done, put a thigh on each plate, add a spoonful of onions as a side and drizzle everything with the bean sauce. And done. I'm not going to lie: this was messy and a little labor-intensive. But I was happy with how it came out. It was not too sour, not too salty, and filling. Just right.
Probably the best validation was people at work the next day remarking upon how good it smelled, even though by then the leftovers looked more like a soup than a main dish. Spicy black bean soup with lime chicken.
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