Deb Perelman's Slow-Roasted Chicken with Schmaltzy Croutons Recipe | The Nosher (2024)

Dinner

This slow roasted method ensures super moist chicken and crispy skin.

ByDeb Perelman|

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I always thought that the rules for achieving perfectly juicy, bronzed and crisp-skinned roast chicken were simple: pat it very dry, and blast it in a very hot oven. It’s the only way… right? Yet it seems out of step with so many other kinds of roasts that benefit from longer, lower-temperature cooking times. Curious, I gave it a try on a cold, lazy weekend afternoon, and what emerged from the oven a couple hours later defied all of my expectations. Not only did it have deeply bronzed and very crisp skin, it was also the most succulent, juicy chicken I have ever eaten. My pickiest child couldn’t stop eating it. The pickiest adult (that’s me, and I prefer the term “skeptical,” thank you) couldn’t, either. This is now the method I wish everyone would try, because nobody can make a bad roasted chicken this way.

I’ve put all sorts of things under and around my chicken over the years — potatoes, mixed vegetables, just onions, and even cabbage — but croutons cooked slowly in salty drippings until they’re part burnished and crisp, part tender, rich and schmaltzy, was the one that got me a “Don’t you dare use anything else, ever again.” If you’ve ever had the Zuni Café roast chicken, you’ll know that the best thing to eat with chicken, and chickeny croutons, is a bright salad. The one you make here is both bright and crunchy, balancing the richness. If you come over for dinner this fall, you know what we’re eating.

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Deb Perelman's Slow-Roasted Chicken with Schmaltzy Croutons Recipe | The Nosher (1)
★★★★★5 from 2 reviews

The chicken is crispy and the croutons are schmaltzy, what more could you ask for?

  • Total Time: 2 hours 40 minutes
  • Yield: Serves 4

Ingredients

Scale

For the chicken:

  • 1 ½ lb (680 g) bread (sourdough, miche or sturdy country loaf)
  • olive oil
  • 6 medium garlic cloves (but who’s counting), unpeeled
  • kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 4 lb (1.8-kg) whole chicken
  • 1 lemon
  • a few sprigs fresh thyme

For the salad:

  • juice of 1 lemon
  • 1 tsp smooth Dijon mustard
  • 4 Tbsp (50 g) olive oil
  • ¼ cup (125 g) roughly chopped green olives
  • 1 small fennel bulb, sliced very thin
  • 4 oz (115 g) firm, leafy lettuce, such as escarole

Instructions

  1. Heat the ovento 325°F(165°C).
  2. For the croutons:Cut the bread into 1-inch-thick slices. Coat a 9-by-13-inch roasting pan or baking dish with olive oil.Arrange the bread snug in the bottom, cutting the slices into small pieces as needed. (Tetris-heads, this is our time to shine.)Nestle the garlic cloves between the bread pieces throughout the pan. Drizzle the bread with 2 Tbsp olive oil, ½ tsp kosher salt and lots of freshly ground black pepper.

  3. For the chicken:Sprinkle the chicken with 2 tsp kosher salt, blackpepper, finely grated zest from the lemon and the leaves from a couple of thyme sprigs. Cut the lemon in half and toss it, and any additional thyme sprigs, into the bird’s cavity. Place the chicken on top of the bread and — this is essential to keep the bread from drying out until the chicken releases any juices — sprinkle the exposed pieces of bread around the chicken with ½ cup water.Roast for about 2 hours-2 hours 20 minutes, or until a thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the breast reads 155°F, or 165°Ffor the thigh.

  4. Finish the croutons:Transfer the chicken to a cutting board, but beforeyou do, take a look at the croutons.If they’re very dry, tilt the bird over them, drizzling juices that have collected inside the bird over the bread to moisten it.If they are not yet dried out, you can skip this.In all cases, use a spatula to flip the croutons, and return them to the oven to cook for about 15-20 minutes, or until they’re largely crisp and golden brown, while the chicken rests.The amount of time this takes depends on how dried out they were going in; they sometimes need longer.

  5. Meanwhile, prepare yoursalad:Combine the lemon juice and Dijon mustard in a large bowl, and whisk in the olive oil in a thin stream.Season well with black pepper and more salt.Add the olives and fennel, and toss to combine.Set aside until right before serving; then add the salad greens, and toss to coat them.Season salad with additional salt and pepper.

  6. To serve:Remove the pan with the croutons from the oven, and transferthem to a serving platter.Shmear the garlic cloves over the toasts, discarding the peels. Heap the salad on top. Carve the chicken, and arrange the pieces on top of the salad and croutons. Pour any juices from the cutting board over the chicken, and serve immediately.

  • Author: Deb Perelman
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Cook Time: 2 hours 30 minutes
  • Category: Dinner
  • Method: Oven
  • Cuisine: Shabbat

From “Smitten Kitchen Keepers: New Classics for Your Forever Files” by Deb Perelman. Copyright © 2022 by Deb Perelman. Excerpted bypermissionof Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted withoutpermissionin writing from the publisher.

2 comments

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  • MaryJanuary 21, 2024

    I roast a lot of chickens, a lot of different recipes and techniques and believe me, this is about the most satisfying one of all! I’m making it for the fifth time this evening. One thing I do is cut the baguette (buy a real one) lengthwise. But I don’t do the salad, (too lazy) so breaking up the bread after it’s cooked is not a big deal for us. Thanks for this revelation, slow cooking has not failed me here.

    Reply

  • MaryJanuary 21, 2024

    Wanted to add – I intend to make this salad, it sounds absolutely delicious!

    Reply

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Deb Perelman's Slow-Roasted Chicken with Schmaltzy Croutons Recipe | The Nosher (2024)

FAQs

How to roast a chicken Nigella Lawson? ›

Place the onions, carrots, and fennel in a roasting pan. Toss with salt, pepper, 20 sprigs of thyme, and olive oil. Spread around the bottom of the roasting pan and place the chicken on top. Roast the chicken for 1 1/2 hours, or until the juices run clear when you cut between a leg and thigh.

Is it better to roast chicken at 350 or 400? ›

You can roast or bake anywhere between 325 and 450 degrees F. When roasting a whole chicken, a nice rule of them is to start at 400 to 425 degrees F and then turn the oven down to 350 after 15 minutes and cook until the internal temp of the chicken is 165 – 175 degrees F on an instant read thermometer.

Is it better to roast a chicken covered or uncovered? ›

If you want your chicken to be truly roasted with crisp, golden-brown skin, it needs to spend time in the oven uncovered. If you find that some parts of the skin are browning more rapidly than others, you can loosely tent the browner parts with foil to allow the rest of the skin to catch up.

Why is my roast chicken tough? ›

Overcooking chicken and buying woody chicken breast are two of the main causes behind rubbery chicken. You can stop this from happening by: buying “slow-growing” chicken. cooking your chicken in moisture.

How to cook chicken like a chef? ›

How to Make Perfectly Cooked Chicken Breasts
  1. Season the chicken breasts with salt and black pepper on both sides.
  2. Add olive oil to a sauté pan over high heat. ...
  3. Heat the oil until it begins to smoke lightly. ...
  4. Add the chicken breasts, turn the heat to medium-high, and cook them for 3 ½ to 4 minutes.
Oct 23, 2023

What not to do when roasting a chicken? ›

The 5 mistakes to avoid with roast chicken
  1. Skipping the de-pluming step. ...
  2. Not cutting off the ends of the wings (the thinnest part) ...
  3. Skipping prep before roasting. ...
  4. Roasting the chicken in too much seasoning. ...
  5. Cooking the meat for too long or too little.
Oct 2, 2020

Is it better to roast or bake chicken in the oven? ›

When making foods that have a solid structure (vegetables or meats), you should roast the food. If you're making foods that aren't solid before cooking (cake, bread, etc), you should bake the food. While both methods use dry heat, the process and the temperatures can vary due to the structure of the food.

Should chicken be covered when roasting in oven? ›

Larger cuts, such as whole chickens or bone-in pieces, often benefit from covered baking to ensure thorough and even cooking. Smaller cuts, like chicken breasts or tenders, can be baked uncovered for quick results.

How to cook chicken in the oven Martha Stewart? ›

Directions
  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place chicken breasts in a 9-by-13-inch baking dish. Season both sides generously with salt and pepper. ...
  2. Bake until a meat thermometer registers 160 degrees in the thickest part of the breast, about 20 minutes. Remove chicken from pan; let rest 10 minutes before slicing.
Jun 12, 2017

How to cook roast chicken James Martin? ›

Method
  1. Preheat the oven to 200C/180C Fan/Gas 6.
  2. Place the onions and carrots in a deep-sided roasting tin, then sit the chicken on top. ...
  3. Roast for 1-1¼ hours, or until the chicken is cooked through. ...
  4. Remove the chicken from the oven and set aside, covered, to rest for 10 minutes.

What is Mary Brown's chicken cooked in? ›

Mary Brown's has developed its very own proprietary cookers. Rather than pressure fried, which is the industry standard, our cookers use heat to seal in juiciness and flavour and give our chicken its delicious natural golden colour. Mary Brown's is real, wholesome, comfort food, made fresh daily.

Does Ina Garten wash chicken? ›

Washing your chicken is going to have Garten crying foul, and for good reason. During an episode of Food Network's "Cook Like a Pro," she explained, "I know there's this whole debate about whether you wash the chicken before you do this, or you don't," but the professional chef is on the side of not doing it.

What temperature does Ina Garten roast a chicken? ›

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.

What is the best way to ensure a roast chicken is fully cooked? ›

Simply insert your food thermometer into the thickest part of the chicken (for a whole chicken, that would be the breast). You know your chicken is cooked when the thermometer reads 180°F (82°C) for a whole chicken, or 165°F (74°C) for chicken cuts.

Does Ina Garten cook in her own kitchen? ›

But we'd guess that not many of us spend as much time in our kitchens as Ina Garten, the Food Network personality and cookbook author who goes to work in her kitchen all year long.

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