MY FAVORITE ROAST CHICKEN

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33 responses to “MY FAVORITE ROAST CHICKEN”

  1. No, not water at the end of such a feast. White wine, nothing fancy, just plain white wine. Cuts through the grease and lets all those lovely lingering tastes dance around for a while longer.

  2. Looks amazing… will definitely make. Sunday roast (or bbq in summer) is a go-to most times for the delicious leftovers that go into lunches for the week (and carcasses get saved for stock).

    And, oh, the oysters are the first thing I pluck off of my chicken or turkey… never make it to the table… most succulent part of the bird!

    Stumbled across your excellent site a short while ago :)

  3. Even at those high temps, I have a hard time believing that a 3-lb chicken would roast that quickly. I’ll follow the technique and ingredients, but I’ll also have my handy-dandy food thermometer at the ready. Good rule of thumb is 20 min per pound.

    • Hi Mom2two, my chicken was 2.9 lbs (weighted when it was frozen though) and it was cooked through in 35 min. Surprised me as well… I do think most roast chickens are actually overcooked, but of course, it doesn’t hurt to be careful. Be careful with a thermometer in a roasting chicken, because it may cause the juice to run unstoppably through the hole!

  4. I love your blog and your writing. FANTASTIC photos and just awesome descriptions. Can’t wait until I get all my kitchen stuff back after this transitory year in Baltimore so I can actually have an arsenal to cook with. Excited to read more!

  5. Really good roast chicken is just as good as any dry aged steak. Especially if you factor in chicken grease potatoes. I’m still working on my ideal recipe but starting off with Jean George’s perfect roast chicken – it uses kombu! And ahhh tell me you’ve had the roast chicken at Nomad in NY. Entirely too expensive but it has truffle and foie under the super crispy skin and then tear the dark meat into a creamy confit. Amazing.

  6. Eating it with a runny egg is genius (and oh so poetic). I’ll mirror Jess’ comment regarding my own dinner plan inferiority – tonight will likely be a very classy meal of pickles, half a PB&J, boiled egg, and raw bell pepper (unsliced, because that takes effort – so I just eat them like an apple), with a handful of chocolate chips for dessert. I’m also aware that armed with those same ingredients, you’d likely make something freaking delicious (and fully expect that next week I’ll see a post to that effect) :p

  7. Well another remarkable meal you have given to all! Not a bit leftover and the sauce , well let’s just say I drank it and my fingers cleaned the pan pretty damn good!

  8. Hi Mandy,
    I made this the other night – wow! I’m not sure I can ever eat roasted chicken again without a fried egg. There is just something so great about browned butter and fresh herbs. I have used sage and rosemary before and it makes any dish magical. My chicken was closer to five lbs. so I had leftovers. I made a chicken salad and stuffed it in tomatoes and heated up the leftover potatoes on the side. Two great dinners. This is a keeper, fo sho!

  9. I made this today because I saw the recipe on Friday (!!!!!!!!!!) and I went slightly insane over the sheer genius of it. RUNNY YOLKS? ON CHICKEN? Both absurd and genius! The Dada elements to it angered and intrigued me.

    Now I have gained about five inches of girth as I ate half a three pound chicken and two runny eggs by my lonesome, and I still occasionally waddle over to the kitchen, a full hour later, stomach whimpering “no more” while I pick chicken off the sad leftovers.

    This has ruined me.

    Thank you.

  10. Hmmm. I’m going to make this tomorrow, but instead of potatoes I’m going to serve it (and the egg) on top of a pile of crispy pan-fried white beans & greens. It may be a bit much for bare hands so I’ll probably use a shov…spoon.

  11. Made this yesterday as a going away dinner for my boyfriend who is leaving tow for a couple of weeks. We both found it absolutely lovely! (He is unfortunately one of those weird garlic haters, so I left it out, but it still turned out amazing.)

    Becoming absolutely addicted to this blog, by the way.

  12. 读到背部向上和这么高的烤制温度时,我当真心跳快了好几拍——我也是这么干的!!!虽然觉得自己根本够不上能够写作食谱的资格,但烤鸡的确是我非常在意而又略有心得的一道菜。唯一在网上写过的一篇食谱就是烤鸡。http://www.douban.com/note/485854173/
    现在很好奇这个刷醋水的方子,下次烤了再来汇报。

  13. Mandy, do you think this recipe/technique would also work for a Thanksgiving turkey (with stuffing)? If there are changes to be made, what would you recommend?

  14. no matter how many times i reread this i dont understand if the chicken is roasting on sheet itself with the potatoes, on the rack above the sheet with the potatoes on the sheet getting the drippings, or the chicken and potatoes and garlic all on the wrack on top of the backing sheet. does this make sense?

    • Joy, haha ok ok, place the chicken on a baking-rack, then place the potatoes and garlics in a sheet-pan that fits the baking-rack (the rack and pan usually come in a set), then place the backing-rack WITH the chicken on top OVER/ON TOP the sheet-pan. The chicken doesn’t touch the potatoes underneath, but the dripping will drip through the baking-rack, down into the potatoes. does this help?

  15. YUM. I am a huge fan of Thomas Keller’s roast chicken and your changes seem like they could only be improvements. The eggs are new to me though it does seem like a great idea, perhaps in lieu of the gravy I usually make. The fat sputtering inside the oven is always a bit of an issue for me but I feel that the potatoes might absorb some of that? In any case, a must-try. Thanks!

  16. So I used to stand by Zuni Cafe’s 3-day salted roast chicken that’s also roasted with the thighs up first and now I’m only going to roast my chickens your way. As great as Zuni Cafe’s chicken was, it was more time consuming and troublesome but no better than yours–even. . . dare I say, not as good as yours? I mean, Zuni’s chicken is still respectable but it’s only almost as good as a TK + Mandy Lee chicken.
    I’m feeling a little glum because I’m suffering a mild food coma but also because I keep commenting to tell you how great your recipes are and it seems very fangirly and ridiculous and (I hope only) borderline creepy. But, Mandy, you NEED to know how much awesomeness your work brings to kitchens all over the world!
    Roast chicken is one of my favorite things to cook and your straightforward recipe takes any anxiety out while making sure it’s still sock-rockingly delicious. The breast meat was succulent and the thyme and garlic butter complemented the chicken and potatoes without distracting.
    My parents laughed when I brought the fried eggs out to the table because it seemed so unusual to eat with roast chicken but cut to 15 minutes later and my father was reaching for the only bread-y carb we had in the house, which ended up being a blueberry bagel, to wipe the last of the buttery, chickeny egg yolk from his plate. Who’s laughing NOW, Dad???????
    Uh. . . I’m fine. . . And full and happy. Great chicken!

  17. hmmmm is fantastic i like roast chicken it’s great taste with herb of potatoes and garlics roasted inside its own grease,My taste buds love this. This is the best recipe I’ve made for dinner,That is exciting! I am so happy for you!Thank you!

  18. Wow. I made this today and it tastes DELICIOUS – like a Ding Dong, I didn’t take any photo evidence… I believe my oven is not as hot as the temp displays, so cooking time did take a little longer. But I do have a question…there was hardly any chicken drippings that fell from the bird and into the pan. My potatoes were as dry as my Santa Fe desert outside so I ended up adding some homemade stock that my fiancé had made the day before, but I was wondering what I might have done wrong? The chicken itself, once cooked, was delicious and moist!
    (On a side note I’ve been an avid follower of yours for years – (pre-cook book – which I have and LOVE). I think I even left a comment back in 2015 to which you replied. Anyway! Thanks for everything and all the light you bring to my little world.)

    • Amanda, glad you liked the recipe:). No dripping? Hm, the only reason I could think of is that nowadays, all the delicious fat may have been bred out of the chicken entirely. Does your chicken have very thin white skin? If so, then that’s a unfortunately lean chicken.

  19. Hmm. That may totally be what’s going on. Thank you! Next time I’ll try and make sure to grab the chubbiest one I can find. Are pasture-raised birds more likely to be leaner birds?

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