Tajine.
A deep glazed-earthenware dish with a conical lid that fits flush with the rim. It is used throughout North Africa for preparing and serving a range of of dishes that are cooked slowly in a flavoured basting liquid: these preparations themselves are also called tajines and are made with vegetables, such as potatoes and courgettes (zucchini); fish; chicken with quinces or dates; meat; or even fruit. Mutton with prunes, or veal with tomatoes and aubergines (eggplants) are typical.
-Larousse Gastronomique
Tajines are vibrant, alluring, intoxicating, and addicting. As a grown up, my first taste of a sultry tajine totally seduced me with its warm exotic spices. It had me. Because tajines are personal, anything can be thrown into a tajine, but spices are key.
Thanks to Michael, I had a pantry filled with amazing spices and spice blends. Check.
Chicken Tajine with Figs and Apricots.
After making a quick stop at the Indoor Winter Market to pick up a pre-ordered 2 pound organic hen from Elmwood Stock Farm, I boarded the Marrakesh Express.
Tajines can be prepared with or without a tajine cooking vessel. A dutch oven is a great substitute, but an earthenware tajine has a slightly opened conical lid that allows wisps of steam to escape as flavored condensation builds up, rises, and drips back down into the stew. Low and slow.

Mise en place.
While the chicken took a bath in the ridiculous spice blend, I halved 2 cups of dried black figs and dried apricots. I thinly sliced a whole onion, quartered 2 tomatoes, minced 4 garlic cloves, peeled a small bunch of baby carrots, and set them aside before blooming a generous pinch of saffron in 2 cups of simmering chicken stock.
Low and slow.

After layering the tajine with carrots, apricots, and figs, I nudged the chicken pieces into the mix before finishing with a layer of quartered tomatoes, apricots, figs, sliced lemons, sliced blood oranges, halved fresh plums, and carrots. I drizzled Nickels Pure Raw Kentucky Honey over the chicken, added the fragrant chicken stock, nestled the lid onto the tajine, and slid it into a 325 degree oven to braise for 2 1/2 hours.
I fought the urge to check on the stew. I simply let it rip while we drank wine in the parlor. Hands off. Lazy supper. Perfect.
I filled deep pasta bowls with pine nut-flecked couscous. After spooning the chicken, vegetables, and fruit over the delicate grains, I doused them with the intense pan sauce before finishing with a few fresh cilantro leaves.
It was ridiculous. The dried apricots and figs plumped from the long braise. The squirting fat fruit melted into the collapsed tomatoes, plums, and onions, creating a velvety savory/sweet sticky glaze with contrasting textures, body, and layers of flavor that enveloped the incredibly moist chicken. Finger food. We ripped the tender meat from the bones, dragged it through the sauce, and used the fruit/vegetable melange as candied chasers. Messy business. Pull. Dip. Swipe. Suck. Repeat.
Stained fingers.
Spiced lips.
Sexy food.
Fabulous.