How To Roast A Chicken
Roasted Chicken
Recipe
Roasted
chicken is one of the tastiest, most satisfying dishes you can make. This
tutorial will show you how to roast a chicken.
NOTE: This roasted chicken tutorial also includes the procedure for making gravy, starting with Step 9. If you're interested, here's more on how to make gravy.
Also see: How to Brine a Chicken
NOTE: This roasted chicken tutorial also includes the procedure for making gravy, starting with Step 9. If you're interested, here's more on how to make gravy.
Also see: How to Brine a Chicken
Difficulty:
Easy
Time
Required: 1½
hours
Here's How:
- Preheat oven to 425°F.
- Remove the neck and giblets (heart, gizzard, liver)
from the chicken's body cavity and pat the bird dry, inside and out, with
paper towels.
- Smear the outside and inside of the chicken with
butter, then season with Kosher
salt and freshly ground black pepper — both inside and out.
- Truss
the chicken securely with cooking twine. This step is optional, but it
will help your roasted chicken cook more evenly.
- Roughly chop about half an onion and a single celery
stalk and a single medium carrot. Scatter these chopped veggies (known as mirepoix)
at the bottom of a roasting pan.
- Set a roasting rack over the chopped veggies and place
the chicken (breast-side-up) onto the rack.
- Transfer the roasting pan to the oven and roast the
chicken for an hour to 1 hour and 15 minutes (depending on size) or until
an instant-read
thermometer inserted into the thigh reads 165°F. Don't poke too many
holes with the thermometer, though — you don't want the juices to leak
out.
- Remove the roasting pan from the oven, carefully lift
out the rack with the roasted chicken on it and transfer the bird to a
clean cutting
board. Let it rest there, covered with foil, for about 10 minutes
before carving.
NOTE: The optional steps that follow are for making gravy. - Place the roasting pan over a medium heat on the
stovetop to brown the mirepoix.
- Drain off any excess chicken fat (which you can use for
making the roux in the next step), pour about 2 cups of chicken
stock or broth into the pan and simmer until reduced by about a third.
- To thicken the gravy, add a small amount of roux,
or combine 2 Tbsp cornstarch with 2 Tbsp cold water to make a paste
(called a slurry)
and stir this into the stock.
- Return to a boil, lower heat and simmer
for a minute or so or until the mixture thickens, then strain through a
mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth.
- Season the gravy to taste with Kosher salt and black
pepper.
Tips:
- You can stuff the bird with fresh herbs or
other aromatic items. Thyme, rosemary and marjoram are good choices, but
any fresh herbs will do. A couple of lemons or oranges cut into wedges or
some fennel
fronds are also good for stuffing the chicken. But remember, these items
aren't to be eaten. They're for adding flavor and aroma only. And of
course, whatever you choose to stuff the chicken with, just be sure to do
it before you truss the chicken!
- For an even juicier roasted chicken, push lumps of
butter under the skin before roasting it.
- Add a few peeled cloves of garlic to the
carrot-celery-onion mixture before roasting.
- Don't worry about basting
the chicken. You let the heat out of the oven every time you open the
door, and that's not good. Also, drizzling hot liquid from the roasting
pan over the chicken breast merely accelerates the cooking, thus drying
out the meat more than if you just left it alone.
- Instead of mirepoix, just lay
a few slices of bread at the bottom of the roasting pan. As the
chicken roasts, the drippings will soak into the bread and the bread
itself will turn all toasty and delicious.
What You Need
- One whole chicken, about 4 to 5 lbs
- Roasting pan with rack
- Butter, Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
- Carrots, celery and onion
- Chicken stock or broth
- Butter and flour for making a roux, or cornstarch for
making a slurry
- Instant-read thermometer
- Mesh strainer with cheesecloth
- Optional: Garlic, fresh herbs and citrus fruits such as
lemons or oranges
- Optional: About three feet of kitchen twine for
trussing
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