Roasted Chicken and the perfect gravy

Ingredients

  • 1 size 14 free-range chicken
  • Sea salt
  • 1 lemon
  • Small bunch of thyme or tarragon
  • ½ cup or more chicken stock
  • Herb butter
  • 50g butter, softened
  • 1 teaspoon creamy Dijon mustard
  • 1 clove garlic, peeled and finely crushed with a little sea salt
  • 1 tablespoonm chopped chervil
  • 2 tablespoons chopped parsley
  • 2 tablespoons snipped chives

Method

  1. Preheat oven to 180°C.

  2. Remove any lumps of fat from inside chicken cavity, then rinse chicken inside and out. Drain briefly then pat dry with paper towels. Season inside cavity with a little sea salt. Rub cut lemon all over chicken skin, then put lemon halves inside chicken cavity with a clump of thyme or tarragon.

  3. In a small bowl blend butter, mustard, garlic and chopped herbs with a few pinches of sea salt. Slip the fingers and thumb of one hand between the chicken breast skin and flesh on one side of the breast and squeeze in 1 tablespoon of the butter seasoning, massaging it around so that it is even. Then repeat with the other side of the breast.

  4. Tie a piece of string around the parson’s nose, then tie the legs together pinning the wings in place, bring it back to the parson’s nose and tie it in a tight bow. Bring the string up and tie it around the legs. Loop skin around back of chicken, tucking in wings, and bring it back to parson’s nose and tie in a tight bow.

  5. Put chicken breast uppermost in a small roasting dish or shallowish casserole. Gently melt remaining herbed butter and brush over chicken. Sprinkle chicken with sea salt and pour around ½ cup stock. Roast for 45 minutes, basting once, then turn chicken over and cook for 15 minutes. Turn breast up again and cook for a further 30 minutes or so, until juices run clear when pierced with a skewer and when the legs are wiggled, they move freely; top up with more stock if necessary, and remove any accumulation of sticky goo if it looks like catching and burning.

  6. Remove chicken from oven and leave it to rest in the cooking dish for 30 minutes. Tilt chicken and let juices run into casserole. Transfer chicken to a board and let it rest draped in tin foil.

  7. Scoop fat off pan juices, or use a fat separating jug. Reheat juices and pour in verjuice or white wine, or a little more stock. Bubble up, then add chopped fresh herbs if liked (mint, parsley, chives, tarragon).

  8. Carve chicken into joints. Arrange chicken on a platter and spoon over juices. Serve immediately.

Notes

It’s not difficult to roast a chicken like this, but there must always be stock in the dish or any juices will catch and burn, and you don’t want that to happen because the juices are the basis for the jus.

Verjuice is the juice of unripe green grapes used as an acidulant in the same way you would use lemon juice or vinegar, but it’s milder than both of these, with a sweetish fruity presence. While it can be used in place of lemon or vinegar in dressings such as vinaigrette, its greatest role is in deglazing a pan after cooking chicken, game or fish. Splash it into the pan the same way you would wine or stock, dislodging any flavour-filled crusty pieces, then let it reduce down until syrupy. Either pour the juices over the cooked food, or return cooked food to the pan and turn it to coat in the juices. It adds another dimension to the finished dish. Try to get chervil if you can (or use tarragon in summer).

Original recipe on RNZ