Roasting a whole chicken is about the chickeniest thing we can think to do with a bird. It's not the easiest, though (getting the skin crisp, keeping the meat moist...) And there are many, many methods. Do you salt your bird and let it sit overnight, Zuni-style? Do you use lemon? Inside or out?
We find that the Zuni method of salting and drying out the bird results in fewer grease splatters on the inside of our oven. But we also love to mash up soft butter with a bunch of herbs and spread it under the skin.
We have a family member who fills syringes with melted butter and injects his Thanksgiving turkeys. Maybe that's a trick for chickens, too?
What are your best roasting tips? Let us know!
Related: Tip: Finishing Undercooked Chicken Breasts in the Oven
(Image: Flickr user freeloosedirt, licensed for use under Creative Commons)
I like to put butter underneath the skin. One time I also basted the skin beforehand with a mixture of honey and oil. It turned out quite well.
view Kitalita's profile
My roast chicken is Chinese style:
-rub with cooking wine
-rub with dark soy
-spice rub: ginger powder, fine ginger powder (aka "sand ginger"), garlic powder, salt and a little sugar
Best when it marinates overnight before roasting.
view Michelle of Montreal's profile
I put Herbes de Provence and Garlic under the skin and roast it upright--the skin gets crisp, the meat stays moist, and there's almost no mess, provided that you put a roasting pan under the doohicky that keeps the bird upright.
view bocadelperro's profile
Hammersley's Walk Away Roast chicken is lovely, though I've adjusted the recipe a little. SO easy!
Recipe is here on the new Pithy and Cleaver:
http://www.pithyandcleaver.com/?p=135
view maggie (p/c)'s profile
Exactly like bebklyn.
view PrettyKitty's profile
Usually I empty the chicken of gibblets, wash it and pat it dry, then salt it, pepper it, add basil, thyme and oregano and maybe a little red pepper flake. Toss it in the oven for an hour at 350-375. When it comes down, I take a stick of butter and rub it all over the skin (the whole stick doesn't get used...it just makes a good handle). Comes out perfect everytime!
view bfootnovellista's profile
Sometimes I stuff with lemons, sometimes I rub with Penzey's Northwoods Fire Seasoning (generally don't bother with blends, but that one I love), but if I want a plain chicken, I use a trick I found in an old cookbook. I blend butter with equal parts dry mustard, ground ginger and salt, and rub that under the skin. That blend of flavors does something lovely to the chicken - it tastes more "chickeny," without actually tasting like any particular spice. Very useful if you want a basic roast chicken for use in another recipe (like a chicken salad), or if your side dishes have a lot of pizazz and you want to keep the chicken on the quiet side. (If I have the chicken the night before, I rub the salt into the skin and let it sit, then I skip the salt in the butter mix).
view pyewacket's profile
I roast (usually) chicken legs, but I've tried this method with whole chickens and works just as nicely.
1. Place chicken on an oven dish/tray/wherever.
2. Crumble a bouillon cube (chicken) over it.
3. Juice a lemon (bottled lemon juice doesn't really work well) over it.
4. Ready to roast.
It's so easy, you don't add any fat and the results... just try it before judging.
view xieta's profile
Huh. I don't find it that difficult. :)
I always brine my birds first, then stuff the body cavity with whatever I have available (ranges from herbs from my garden, to garlic, to lemons, to apples ... or any combination of the above), then rub the skin with olive oil and salt.
That's pretty much it. Easy and fast.
(ps - Any time I try to post a comment from any browser other than IE, I get a "500 Internal Server Error" message.)
view KaraSP's profile
what timing, I just roasted a chicken last night. Outside: lemon juice, olive oil, s&p. inside: the remaining lemons, fistfuls of thyme, rosemary, and garlic, and I'll also stuff some of this under the skin. I roast on top of some veggies, whatever I have around that day, and have always deliciously browned skin with very tender meat.
view phu's profile
Funny you should ask! I actually put my method down as a step-by-step process in case anyone needs that much guidance:
http://danamccauley.wordpress.com/2008/09/23/how-to-roast-a-chicken/
in a nutshell: I'm an oil and seasonings on the outside and aromatics on the inside kinda girl.
view Dana McCauley's profile
@KaraSP -- I was doing a little work on the comment server this morning. It's been a bit overloaded lately, so I had to rework some of the internals. If you're still having trouble, try visiting the logout link:
http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/superlogout
... and then try to login again. If that doesn't work, you can email me at scott@apartmenttherapy.com
view Scott T.'s profile
Mmm, this is making me crave a roast chicken RIGHT NOW...
view Brooklynnina's profile
I usually rub a paste of garlic, salt, olive oil, pepper, rosemary, paprika, and lemon juice as far under the skin as possible, and put lemons and garlic in the cavity.
view heather77's profile
Balthazar style - herb butter under the skin, herbs & garlic inside. Sear the outside before roasting for a great burnished look and crispy skin.
view preppycuisine's profile
Just roasted some legs and thighs a few nights ago. Cut potatoes, onions - toss them in olive oil, salt, pepper. Add chicken - toss in olive oil, salt, pepper, regular ol' italian seasoning mix, and then drizzle everything in balsamic vinegar and lemon. Slow roast for about an hour - fall off the bone goodness. And if you're going to reheat, do it in the oven, low and slow. sooo good.
view chusmabilly's profile
Zuni style indeed. The key is high heat. Cooks fast, crispy skin, moist inside. I usually bake at anywhere from 475 up to nearly 500 degrees. 20 minutes breast up, 15 flipped over, and 15-20 up again.
view s and the r's profile
I always, ALWAYS butterfly it ala Cooks Illustrated. Use a shears to snip the carcass down the center of the back and then open it up so it lays flatish on a sheet pan/rack or layer of veg.
Cooks in about 1/2 the time and much more evenly, plus you get 100% of the skin nice and crispy. Best method ever and almost impossible to screw up, regardless of the oven temp you use.
For seasonings, I'm partial to dry rosemary/herbs, garlic, salt, and pepper ground to a paste with a mortar and pestle plus enough olive oil to make it spreadable. Smear over the whole carcass, inside and out.
view splatgirl's profile
I learned from my father and his father. You take your chicken wash it then sprinkle the whole exterior with season salt (peprika, salt, garlic powder, chili powder), then some Mrs Dash type stuff on the inside. Tye the legs together and place it breast down, (so that the jucies flavor the white meat) straight onto your hot bbq over a nice bead of coals. No turning nessicary if you get the temp around 300/350 and let it cook till it falls apart. The skin is super crispy and the meat is juicy and smokey.
view Aquablood's profile
I usually do butter, mustard, garlic and tarragon or thyme under the skin, and onion with some type of citrus fruit in the cavity.
view NYKate's profile
I cook mine just like splatgirl. I started spatchcocking (butterflying) the bird a year ago, and never looked back. It's the best! I also put lemon slices under the flat carcass - they caramelize and get sweet, and the juice is lovely squeezed over the crispy skin.
view pingarina's profile
I do roast chicken one of two ways --
Either following Simon Hopkinson, with butter, lemon and herbs, usually a "wet roast" with white wine (I sit the chicken on very thick slices of onion -- something I picked up from Martha, which are delicious) --
http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2008/01/sunday_supper_simon_hopkinsons_roast_chicken.html
Or, "Bud's Roast Chicken" from Norma Darden's book, Spoonbread and Strawberry Wine, with mustard, herbs, and lemon:
http://www.marthastewart.com/recipe/buds-sunday-roast-chicken?autonomy_kw=bud's%20roast%20chicken&rsc=header_2
view mschatelaine's profile
PAPER BAGS!
My secret is roasting the chicken in a paper bag. Rub the outside of the bird with a little bit of crisco, rub the inside of the bag with crisco as well. Stuff whatever you want into the bird, season with any seasonings you choose, place in paper bag and staple shut.
Roast in oven at 350 for 12 minutes per pound or until internal temp reaches 165.
Golden brown, moist and juicy, LOVE IT.
view Hannah Ruth's profile
Someone showed me this years ago and claimed it was a "heritage trailer trash recipe": Make a paste of olive oil and Lipton dried onion soup mix. Slather chicken and roast. It turns out surprisingly well.
view Paladin's profile
I have been known to use: oil, soy sauce, herbs, garlic, salt, pepper, mecap sauce, onion, lemons...
view buda's profile
doesn't really matter, but i wonder where my post went... it must have been up earlier, PrettyKitty referred to it.
just thought i'd point out there might be a glitch.
view bebklyn's profile
I rub it down in bacon fat! Yummmmm. then whatever herbs my kid comes back with from the garden. honestly, she can't tell the difference between oregano and thyme. geez.
view little green's profile
i brine it for an hour in a sugar/salt water, butterfly the chicken, rub 1 tbl butter on it and sprinkle liberally with salt and pepper. before i started to butterfly it the thighs and drumsticks were always dry and tough. now everything is perfectly cooked! we make it once a week.
i cook it on a broiler pan. if we're feeling really naughty we fill the bottom of the pan with carrots and potatoes. they cook in the drippings and are amazing. greasy, but amazing.
http://threadtrace.wordpress.com
view cassiopia's profile
Mmmmmmmmm.....lots of garlic, kosher salt, and then whatever I'm in the mood for. Sometimes chili powder, sometimes rosemary, sometimes paprika...
Some of my favorite recipes lately are:
http://thepioneerwoman.com/cooking/2009/03/braised-chicken/
http://www.kayotic.nl/blog/?p=2351
view AlaskaTeacher's profile
I'd use the elaborate basting/buttering/seasoning approaches if I were stuck cooking a chicken-in-a-bag that I had to *make* taste good an moist.
But then I tried a really good free-range bird, and now I only use Thomas Keller's simple recipe from Bouchon: pat that sucker as dry as you can, rain a good coating of kosher salt over it, and roast it in a hot oven (450) for about an hour. Eat it with unsalted butter and good dijon mustard.
Unbelievably tasty.
view elvedon's profile