I had a vacuum packed bone-in chicken breasts that was expiring, and some more leftover ham from Christmas, so I decided to make something *like* Chicken Cordon Bleu / Chicken Roulade….
I started by cutting the meat from the bones to make bone broth with, keeping the breast halves as intact as I could. Since I was making the broth, I didn’t need to be as careful about removing every little bit, and those as well as the skins went in the Intant Pot with 2C water and a pinch of sea salt at Soup HIGH 20 min.
While that was cooking and eventually releasing pressure, I slit the breast side ways to get four flat cuts (the 4th one decided to be difficult (I hadn’t hugged the rib cage enough with the filet knife) so that one ended up in several small pieces plus a butterflied thick cut. They were seasoned with sea salt and freshly ground black/white pepper mix, dusted with potato starch, then coated with EVOO — this was a pre-cooking prep that was mentioned in a video as universally useful for chicken breasts. You could then leave in the fridge until ready to cook. (I actually added Roku gin and “Garlic Everything Sauce” as well. Now what was the brand name? Sir Kensington’s I think?)
I picked onion slices and slivers of carrots and celery, plus the stems of napa from my hoophouse chopped thin across the veins, plus half of a leftover baked potato sliced thin lengthwise for the veg.
I then sliced some of the smaller pieces of the ham across the grain (left the larger chunks to be sliced for sandwiches etc.) I also planned to put a slice of raw cheap cheddar, a pat of butter and a blob of vegan cream cheese… and realized there was no way I would roll all that stuff in the amount of chicken I had.
Switching gears, I pulled out rice paper wrap sheets from the pantry (these look like thin sheets of plastic, and you basically just dip/“wet” them in a dinner plat of water, then place on a cutting board or another plate. They soften in a couple of minutes (if you “soak” them, they turn into useless wet noodles that tears at the least amount of tension)
I laid one sheet on a plate, piled the ingredients, folded up the sides to over lap and stick together as much as possible, then cupped the bundle to push them into a tighter bundle, then flipped the package over onto my hand, laid another sheet on the plate and wrapped in the same way from the other side.
When the broth was finished, I strained it and put the broth back in. Then put a bunch of cauliflower florets on the bottom, put the wrapped bundles on individual circles of parchment and used the parchment like slings to lower onto the cauliflower bed.
PC’d as meat/stew on HIGH for 20 minutes, waited for natural release, then removed the bundles and cauliflower, added mixture of spelt flour and powdered coconut milk to thicken, then added broccoli florets and frozen green peas, put the cauliflower and bundles back, and closed the lid — which promptly pressurized again. I left that on KEEP WARM for about 10 minutes and they were ready.
Intensely good flavors. Am still trying to decide if I should have left the cauliflower out until the end to add with broccoli, which would have allowed them to remain firm. As it was, the cauliflower disintegrates into the sauce — it was really good that way, but just not sure if I might have liked it better the other way.
Oh, BTW I was going to eat the bundle with chicken that ended up in several pieces anyway, but even more so when that one was unable to remain intact, fell apart and slid out of both ends of the parchment sling. Luckily the spillage was only minimal and most of the jumbled up mess landed on TOP of the other three that I had already removed onto a platter. I just scooped up everything with a silicone spatula into my bowl, and the parchment for the other bundles had been laying on top, they weren’t unduly messed up.
I should have taken pics but I was pretty much wiped out, especially after that last moment of panic
These were a hit with the family.

. We later used the leftover sauce that was still keeping warm in the Instant Pot to embellish potato pierogis.