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Tag Archives: chicken

Lazy Sunday Lunch

24 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by lemongrassandthyme in Chicken, Dinner, Lunch

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chicken, lemon, thyme

I know that some kind of roast joint is traditional for Sunday lunch, but for me it’s a slow cooked meltingly tender casserole that fills the house with such fabulous smells, or it’s a simple chicken roasted in the oven.  So today I made both.

I’ll deal with the casserole another day, having picked up a lovely free-range, organic chicken I thought that all it needed was something simple to bring out the best flavour.

Lemon and Thyme Roast Chicken

Lemon&Thyme Roast Chicken

  • 1 free range, organic roasting chicken (about 1.75kg)
  • 2 lemons
  • 6-8 sprigs of fresh thyme (2 tsp dried)
  • 2 medium onions, sliced (just leave the skins on)
  • handful of smoked lardons (optional)
  • pepper
  • 35g butter, softened

Directions

  1. Preheat the over to 190 C/170 C Fan/Gas 5.
  2. On a clean board take the chicken and gently use your fingers to separate the skin of the chicken from the breast.  If using dried thyme (or strip the leaves from the fresh stalks) mix this with the softened butter.  
  3. Using your fingers carefully spread the herb butter mixture between the skin and the breast.  Alternatively just spread the butter and carefully push the whole thyme sprigs under the skin.
  4. In a roasting tray scatter the onions in the centre to create a trivet base for your chicken to sit on (they will help add flavour to the juices that you can use to make gravy and protect the bottom of the chicken from the heat of the oven)
  5. Cut the lemons into quarters and squeeze 2-3 quarters over the chicken.  Place a further 2-3 quarters into the cavity of the chicken with most of the lardons (add some extra thyme if you want).  Place the chicken on the bed of onion slices and add the remaining lemon and lardons around the chicken (I also added a few more springs of thyme).
  6. Season the chicken with a very generous amount of fresh black pepper (and sea salt if you must – I don’t) and roast in the over for 45 minutes/kilo plus 20-30 minutes (so in this case about 1h 35m). Test the chicken near the end of the time by putting a skewer through the thigh.  The juices that come out should be clear with no trace of pink.
  7. Once cooked, lift the chicken from the tray and set-aside covered in tin foil for about 10 minutes before carving and serving.  The juices in the tray should be strained and the fat skimmed off to make the gravy.

That’s it.  Simple, no fuss and delicious.  Do what I did and serve with a few roast potatoes and your favourite vegetables.  You can leave out the butter if you want, but it helps keep the chicken really moist.
Lemon&Thyme Roast Chicken
It’s also easy to adjust the flavours, fresh tarragon is wonderful instead of the thyme or crush 3-4 cloves of garlic and mix with the butter.  Another fab version is to mix a Cajun spice rub (you can get a ready-made mix) with the butter.  Regardless of which option I make, I always make sure there are left-overs to make a wonderful chicken salad lunch.

I always used to think that roast chicken was something difficult, now its something I do without even thinking about it.

Leftover Chicken Salad for Lunch

06 Sunday Jan 2013

Posted by lemongrassandthyme in Chicken, Lunch

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chicken, grapes, leftovers, tarragon

I love to make roast chicken (or cheat and pick up a rotisserie chicken from the supermarket) but I always have lots of leftovers.  So as I was needing something to have for lunch at work I decided to make a chicken salad to add to a wrap and sandwiches.  However I wanted something a bit nicer that the usual chicken and sweetcorn, and while chicken veronique is normally a hot dish, the flavours transfer wonderfully to a cold chicken salad.

Chicken Salad Veronique

  • 2 cooked and cooled chicken breasts (I used leftovers from a roast chicken)
  • 1/2 cup (2 large tablespoonfuls) good Mayonnaise
  • 1 1/2 tbsp chopped fresh tarragon (about half a shop bought packet)
  • 1/2 cup seedless green grapes cut in half (about a dozen or so should be enough, but add as many as you like).
  • freshly ground black pepper to taste.

directions:

  1. Cut the chicken into 3/4 inch dice.
  2. Place the chicken, mayonnaise, tarragon and grapes into a bowl and add pepper (and salt if you must) to taste and mix well.

Okay there is nothing too this recipe really, but the flavours are lovely.  If you want a bit of extra crunch you could add some chopped celery (I just can’t stand the stuff).

I also find that mayonnaise on its own can be a bit thick so you could thin it down by using half mayo/half creme fresh or add a drop of cider or tarragon vinegar to the mix.

If you really want to add to the anise flavour you could even add a splash of Ouzo.

Chicken for supper, with a Japanese twist

24 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by lemongrassandthyme in Chicken

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chicken, garlic, ginger, rice, soy sauce

Having friends round for a party means lots of buffet food and I’m always looking out for ideas for something different or new.  I noticed in the shops lots of places doing yakitori chicken skewers, sounded interesting but I wasn’t impressed by what you got for the price, so I made my own and very nice they were too.

However I took the sauce and turned it into a very nice supper.

Yakitori Chicken with Coriander Rice

For the sauce

Yakitori Chicken and coriander rice

  • 1/2 sup soy sauce
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup mirin
  • 1/4 cup sake
  • 1 garlic clove, crushed
  • Fresh ginger, chopped (about 1 inch worth)
  • 1 tbsp cornflour (plus a little water)

For the rest

  • Boneless, skinless chicken thighs (2-3/person)
  • 50-60g rice/person
  • handful of chopped coriander
  • 1 tsp tumeric

Directions(for the sauce)

  1. In a small saucepan, combine soy sauce, sugar, mirin, sake (I didn’t have any so I used 50/50 sherry/white wine), garlic and ginger.
  2. Heat gently to dissolve the sugar and then cook over a medium heat for 5-6 minutes.
  3. Mix the cornflour with a little water.
  4. Stir the cornflour mixture into the soy sauce mix and cook until thickened, stirring constantly.
  5. Strain the sauce and refrigerate until required.

I used the sauce for buffet food initially, adding some of it to diced chicken thigh in a seal-able bag and leaving this in the fridge to marinate overnight.  I then threaded onto mini-skewers and baked for about 18 minutes and served as part of the buffet.

For supper I took the whole chicken thigh and covered in a couple of tablespoons of the sauce and left for about 20 minutes (you could leave overnight).

I then griddled the chicken until cooked, brushing a little more sauce on towards the end.

For the rice I just cooked as per the packet, but added the tumeric to the water.  This gives the rice a lovely golden colour, and once drained forked through a bit of chopped coriander leaf.

I served the chicken up on a bed of the rice and drizzled a bit more of the sauce around the plate.  It was really delicious.  The sauce has a sweet, yet savoury tang to it that is really nice.  It would make a fabulous stir-fry sauce (I added a few teaspoons to fresh noodles as a side dish and was lovely too).

It would make a great sauce for barbecues as well.  I can see me making this a lot.

Note:  I know it’s sad I looked this up, but yakitori describes the method of cooking chicken on a skewer, and not the sauce itself (its really a tare sauce) but it will always be yakitori sauce to me 🙂

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