Incredible Roasted Chicken 04/07/2009
![]() I saw this recipe posted over on The Kitchn about 2 weeks ago and the write-up was so effusive I went and bought a chicken that night to try it out. It was as incredible as promised – so incredible, I made it again a week later. I think my favorite thing about this recipe is that you can easily get 3 or 4 meals out of it: the night you roast it, an unbelievably rich and flavorful stock for later use, salad with leftover meat, sandwiches with leftover meat, etc. To that end, I’ll post recipes over the next few days using up the leftovers from this chicken. You will need: Preheat the oven to 375. On the stovetop, melt the butter with the oil in the dutch oven. When the pan is hot and the butter is melted, place the chicken in the pan and brown. When the first side is browned, turn the chicken ¼ turn and brown the next side. Repeat on remaining sides so that the whole chicken is golden brown. Remove the chicken to a plate and empty out the fat. Return the chicken to the pan breast-side down and add the milk, garlic, zest, cinnamon, and sage. Cover the pan and roast for 1 hour. Remove the lid and roast for another 30 minutes. Remove the chicken from the oven after it has roasted for a total of 90 minutes. Stand at the stove and pick off the skin and eat it up, sharing it only with people you like a WHOLE LOT. Remove the chicken to a plate, pull the meat off the bones, and portion between plates. Save the bones for making stock after dinner. Pour the liquid in the pan into a gravy separator. Pour the liquid out into a gravy boat or pitcher, leaving the fat in the separator. There is no need to strain the liquid – the solids from the separated milk and the wilted sage leaves are DELICIOUS. Set the pan back on the stove and put the bones and all scraps in the pot. Don’t wash the pot – all the little brown sticky bits will give lovely flavor to the stock we’re going to make after dinner. 1 Comment Summer Squash Carbonara 04/01/2009
![]() Last week when we were at Whole Foods, we noticed that organic zucchini and yellow squash had returned. Granted, they were grown in California and Mexico and normally I would prefer to buy local and in-season produce, but it's been a long, cold, grey winter and we were ready for a taste of spring. And also bacon. I had just watched the squash episode of Jamie at Home and couldn't wait to make his carbonara again. That show is straight-up food porn: close-in shots of him tenderly handling produce, tossing things together, and finally the money shot when he unloads the creamy, steaming mixture into an eagerly waiting serving dish. I made the carbonara last fall when his book first came out with zucchini at the very end of its season and it was incredible, so I thought it would be a good inaugural recipe for this site. It's best with small and tender zucchini, but if all you have are the gigantic ones you can make do by scraping the seeds out and cutting them into smaller pieces. You will need: The correct way is to tap the egg firmly on a flat surface such that it cracks. Then, empty the entire egg into a clean hand positioned over a bowl, sink, or compost bucket. With your fingers slightly separated, jiggle the egg gently so the white slips between your fingers and the yolk remains in your hand. Deposit the yolk into a medium bowl and repeat with the remaining eggs. After you have separated the yolks, grate the parmesan cheese. I prefer to use a Microplane grater. It creates a puffy mound of finely grated cheese that will melt quickly and uniformly. Next, mix about half the cheese with the egg yolks and the cream. Set this mixture aside while you prep the zucchini and bacon. Cut the top and bottom off the squash. Cut each in half longitudinally, then slice each half at a 45° angle about ³⁄₈of an inch thick. Each piece should be about the same size and shape as your penne. Cut the bacon equatorially into ¼ inch pieces. It’s easiest to do this if the bacon is quite cold – go ahead and stick it in the freezer for 10 or 15 minutes first. Remove all the leaves from the thyme. In a large skillet, heat a small amount of olive oil. When the skillet is hot and the oil is shimmering, add the bacon. Cook it until it is soft with some brown spots. Add the thyme. While the zucchini is cooking, get your colander ready to drain. I like to put a measuring cup in the colander so that I remember to reserve some of the pasta cooking water. |






















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