Tag Archives: poultry

Succulent roast chicken via yogurt with Brussels Sprouts

Yogurt-marinated chicken with brussels sprouts

Roast chicken is something that falls under my list of foods to have the night before execution or Armageddon.  There is nothing that offers as much comfort as a big, juicy, flavorful chicken with roasted sides, such as the brussels sprouts I show in my example.  Cooks know that making foods that seem simple – like a good roast chicken or braised short ribs – prove one’s culinary mettle.

With chicken the main issues are avoiding breast meat dryness and imparting flavor.  Now, I have prepared many, many chickens in my lifetime, and I find that one of the best ways to hit all the right marks is to use a good yogurt marinade – spreading it under the skin as well as all around the outside.  The yogurt is mixed with an acid, such as lemon or lime juice, salt and some spices.  You are also free to wipe the marinade off the outside of the chicken before roasting, but if you leave it on you’ll get a nice char, particularly under convection conditions, which is desirable if you are using, say, a tandoori spice mix.  (Although it is traditional to remove the skin when making chicken tandoori, what you want here is a flavorful whole roast chicken with skin.)

It is important to note that I salt the chicken before the marinading process in addition to adding it to the marinade.  The salt in the yogurt ensures moisture in the final product.

I prepare this dish using a bit of Thai or Indian curry paste, or a spice mix, such as shawarma – whatever I have on hand or can mix in a pinch.

The last thing to mention is to not overcook the bird.  Use a probe or meat thermometer and remove the chicken from the oven when it reaches the USDA-required internal temperature for chicken (at the innermost thigh and wing and thickest part of the breast), which is, at the time of this posting, 165 deg. F.  If you are using an old meat thermometer, be advised that it probably shows a higher temp than currently required for most things, so always check with the USDA.)

If you would like to make the chicken in the photo, here you go:

Roasted chicken with tandoori spices

1 large, whole, roasting or frying chicken, neck and gizzards removed and dried with paper towels
1/2 c. good, thick, full-fat yogurt
1/8 c. lemon juice
1 teaspoon Kosher salt
2 T. tandoori spice mix (can buy in the spice section of most upscale supermarkets or in Asian/Indian markets
Extra Kosher salt to salt chicken before it goes into marinade – just a little

1)  Whisk yogurt, lemon juice, salt and spice mix.
2)  Salt the inside and outside of the chicken with a little Kosher salt
3)  Loosen skin on chicken, starting from breast end, gently working your fingers down and finally over legs WITHOUT TEARING.
4)  Rub 1/4 of marinade under the skin, making sure to reach all areas.
5)  Rub 1/4 of marinade inside chicken cavities.
6)  Rub remaining marinade over exterior of chicken, getting into all the nooks near the wings and legs.
7)  Place in a bowl, cover with plastic wrap and marinate at least 4 hours.
8)  Place on rack in roasting pan (A rack keeps the bottom of the chicken from boiling in juices, though this is not always a bad thing!)
9)  Roast at 350 deg. F. convection (or 375 deg. F. if you do not have a convection oven) until done.  My 3-pound chicken took about 75 minutes, but you need to go by internal temperature.

If you want to roast a pound of brussels sprouts, do this:

1)  Trim, cut sprouts in half the long way, and wash (one tip, here, which is especially good when dealing with organic produce:  submerge them in water for a few moments, in case there are any little bugs nestled into those tightly-woven leaves).
2)  Place in microwave-safe bowl with a little water, cover with plastic wrap, make one slit in the plastic, and microwave on high for 2 minutes.
3)  Set in high colander to drain until you are ready to roast.
4)  Dry well with a kitchen towel or paper.
5)  Toss onto a sheet pan with some Kosher salt.
6)  Pour 1/4 c. of olive oil onto the pan.
7)  Rub sprouts with oil by hand, leaving them cut side down on the pan.
8)  Roast in the same oven as the chicken for the last 30 or so minutes, or by themselves at 375 deg. F. for 20 – 30 minutes – with convection, if you have it.

You certainly could roast them without the microwave pre-steaming, but they will be less green and less moist.

Chicken wings have come to town

There have been numerous Wing Stop restaurants opening up in my neck of the woods in the last couple of years, and now there is finally one in El Cerrito (340 El Cerrito Plaza).  Wing Stop is not great, but it’s pretty good in terms of tamping down my inner Buffalo wing demon now and then.  The wings are small and pricey, and sometimes the pricing strategy makes no sense, but they are made to order and nice and hot when you take them outta there.  The strips are also good, and you can get them “sauced” just like the wings.  I can speak for the original hot and lemon pepper flavors – both of which are very good.  The mild flavor is just too mild, and the rest, meh, just not my thing. 

Wing Stop’s fries are made from real potatoes with the peel on, and a regular order is very big, with the large being enough for several people if they are also eating wings. 

I am really happy about this addition to the neighborhood, even if it is a chain.  I hope they have not overexpanded and wind up being here awhile.

Birthday lunch at Pear Street Bistro

 

Calamari and shrimp appetizer at Pear Street Bistro in Pinole California

Steve, Matt and I ate lunch at Pear Street Bistro (2395 San Pablo Avenue, Pinole) today to celebrate Steven having taken off this week — which is an occasion, believe me.  I was psyched because I wanted him to have the fried chicken, crab martini, and a couple of other things that are good there.  It’s also a really comfy space.  When we were given the menu, however, I noticed that they no longer had the fixed price lunch, the crab martini, nor the fried chicken.

Crab cocktail at Pear Street Bistro in Pinole California

In fact, they had eliminated all but sandwiches, salads and the like.  What to do?  I told the server about how we were all set for the things we had become accustomed to, and she said it would no problem for them to hook us up with a crab martini, and that the chicken was on the dinner menu only because it comes with mashed potatoes, which they make after lunch.  As long as we didn’t mind having fries, she said, they would do the chicken – or anything else they had the ingredients for, for that matter.  Excellent.

Matt and Steve at Pear Street Bistro in Pinole California

Steve had the chicken, Matt the fish and chips, and I the Cobb salad.  We started with said crab cocktail and their fried calamari/shrimp appetizer.  The chicken was to Steve’s liking, and it came with a side of gravy that he used for his fries that was something like Welsh rarebit.  My Cobb salad was made with romaine, which was good because nowadays you are likely to find Cobbs made with spring mix, which I don’t like because I need a strong lettuce to stand up to all those chunks of bleu cheese and chicken.  The appetizers were good as always, and we like that the crab cocktail comes with nacho chips and guacamole and the seafood with a wasabi sauce that you can use for fries, which the two guys had a boatload of between them.

Costco rotisserie chickens smaller

Costco chicken issues.  Have you been following the story with Costco and its rotisserie chickens?  Over the past year, the cost went up from $4.99, which it had been for years, for a huge bird weighing in excess of four pounds, sometimes, to $6.99.  About a month ago I noticed that the chickens had lost quite a bit of weight.  I always select my chicken for color and size, picking many of them up and doing a full inspection.  All of the chickens were small, and the price was still $6.99, making this not such a great deal anymore.  I thought this might be fluke, like they happened to receive a batch of scrawny birds that week, but the problem persisted the next week.  I’ll bet they got complaints, because when I went to Costco today the chickens were down to $5.99.  Granted, they were still smaller – by a good pound, pound and a half – but at least they had the good sense to realize that you can’t raise the price and reduce the size so dramatically and abruptly.  I called to find out if this has something to do with stopping “plumping.”  Hope so.  Hope to hear back.

Two meals for two in El Cerrito

popovers 2008

My mom and I are on our own, the boys are in Chicago, and we are having a fancified breakfast for two.  I am in the process of roasting chicken sausages, and the popovers just came out of the oven.  Popovers were always around when I was a kid — something my parents made and enjoyed.  They are like Yorkshire pudding in that they are made from a thin egg batter and puff up over the sides of their baking receptacles, resulting in hollow eats.  In fact, they are small, Americanized Yorkshire puddings, originally baked in hot beef fat, but evolved into the sweeter buttery breakfast food we know and love.  This American creation first appeared in the mid-19th century.  Looking in older cookbooks is an easy way to find a good recipe.  Don’t be discouraged if they don’t work out at first – just keep plugging away until you get the hang of it.  Something you may want to have on hand is baking pan spray that has flour in it – in addition to plenty of eggs.

Turkey wings in crock pot

Turkey wings in a slow cooker

Dinner was an American food through and through – braised fresh turkey wings.  If you like chicken wings, you should like these.  Take whole, fresh turkey wings and put them in a Crock-Pot.  Add:  a whole onion, sliced; a few garlic cloves; a little soy sauce; a few scallions; a knob of ginger; salt and pepper.  Pour chicken stock over all of it until the wings are just covered. Crank ‘er up to low.  The wings should be soft after about 5 hours.  I eat this like a soup, adding rice or noodles about 45 minutes before the wings are done.  If you have leftovers, you’ll find the wings suspended in gelatin in the fridge.  I like gelatin, so I pry some of the contents out and eat them cold with a hard roll.  If you have people in your family who would be outraged by turkey wing bones (there is no such person in this house) then you can debone the wings before you serve, but I say to heck with that.  This is a good, honest, casual dish, and anyone who is above making like Fred Flintstone every now and then needs a swift kick in the rear end.