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It is not often when we think of Pot Roasting that we think of pot roasting a whole chicken. Usually, we will pot roast a joint of beef or pork, or even lamb, but not chicken, and I wonder why that is.
We are not averse to stewing chicken pieces, or fricasseeing them, but it hardly ever seems that we will do a whole chicken. Its a shame really because the end result is always tender moist and delicious.
True, we will not get the crisp skin which is usually associated with a roast chicken, but we aren't really supposed to be eating the skin anyways. What you sacrifice in flavor from a sticky crisp skin, you more than make up for in flavor with a perfectly cooked moist and delicious chicken!
This also smells delicious while it is cooking and the gravy you end up with is more than to die for! This has to be one of my favorite ways of preparing a whole chicken. I guarantee you will fall in love with it also!
WHAT YOU NEED TO MAKE POT ROASTED CHICKEN
You may think that some the ingredients are a bit unusual but trust me when I say they totally work!
- 1 TBS sunflower oil
- 1 medium sized roasting chicken (about 4 pounds in weight)
- 6 ounces (175g) bacon lardons or chopped thick sliced bacon
- 1 large onion, peeled and coarsely chopped
- 8 small cloves of garlic, peeled and thinly sliced
- 2 fresh sprigs of rosemary, leaves stripped and roughly chopped
- 1 cup (240ml) of good quality apple cider
- 2/3 cup (180ml) of good quality chicken stock
- 4 small eating apples
- 3 1/2 TBS butter, softened, divided
- 2 tsp sugar
- freshly grated nutmeg
- 2 1/2 TBS plain all-purpose flour
- 2 TBS heavy cream
- 1 TBS chopped fresh flat leaf parsley
- fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
You will want to use the best chicken that you can afford to buy. I often stock up on air chilled organic chickens when they are on offer. I will buy several and freeze them. I like the "free from" chickens which have not been fed antibiotics.
Having said that however, just buy the best that you can afford to purchase.
By eating apples, I mean an apple that is one which you enjoy eating out of hand. Not a cooking apple. I like Pink Ladies myself, but a golden or red delicious apple also works very well. You really just want a sweet eating apple that you would really enjoy eating on its own.
By apple cider you can use either hard cider or apple cider that has not turned. A sparkling apple juice, or a cloudy apple juice. All work well.
I don't drink alcohol so never have it in the house really, so I just use a good cloudy refrigerated stye of apple juice, or fresh apple juice as it is also called. Don't worry it won't make the dish too sweet and actually works very well with all of the remaining ingredients to make a really delicious gravy!
The recipe calls for bacon lardons which is just cubed thick slice streaky bacon. If you cannot get that, just use regular streaky bacon, thick cut, if possible, chopped.
It may sound complicated, but it's really a very simple dish. If anyone knows me, they know I don't do complicated if I can possibly help it.
Preheat the oven to 350*F/180*C/ gas mark 4. Place the oil into a small flameproof casserole or roaster (with a lid) which is large enough to fit the chicken snugly.
Pat your chicken dry and season inside and out with some salt and pepper.
Heat the oil in the casserole and then brown the chicken in the heated oil on all sides. Once it is browned all over, remove to a plate and set aside.
Add the bacon to the casserole and cook, stirring frequently, over medium heat until golden brown. Toss in the onions. Cook and stir for a few minutes longer until they begin to soften. Add the garlic and rosemary and cook, stirring, for several minutes longer. Add the cider.
Cook over high heat at a vigorous boil until the liquid has reduced by two thirds. Place the chicken back into the casserole. Pour in the stock. Cover with a layer of aluminum foil and then place the lid snugly on top. Roast in the preheated oven for 1 hour. (The juices should run clear.)
While the chicken is cooking, peel, core and quarter the apples.
Melt half of the butter in a skillet. Add the apples and fry them for a few minutes until they start to brown. Turn the slices over and sprinkle with the sugar and nutmeg. Continue to cook for several minutes longer until they are nicely golden and tender. Remove from the heat and set aside. Keep warm
When the chicken is cooked through and tender, lift it out onto a large platter. Cover tightly with foil and leave to rest for about 10 minutes.
Put the flameproof casserole over medium heat and simmer until the cooking juices are reduced and full of lovely flavors.
Rub the remaining butter and the flour together. Drop this into the reduced chicken juices, whisking constantly, simmering until the mixture starts to bubble and thicken. Whisk in the heavy cream. Taste and adjust seasoning as necessary with additional salt and black pepper. Stir in the parsley and the apple.
Carve the chicken and serve on heated plates with some of that delicious sauce spooned over top.
Just look at that gorgeous sauce and tender chicken . . . with its chunks of sweet apple, bits of bacon. This is a creamy and unctuously wonderful combination that is incredibly pleasing.
Pot roasting chicken not your thing? Perhaps you would enjoy these other roast chicken dishes:
BUNDT PAN ROAST CHICKEN - A whole chicken is roasted upturned on the stem of a Bundt pan, over some vegetables. The chicken bastes itself while it is roasting along with the vegetables, The end result being tender juicy chicken along with some incredibly delicious sticky roasted vegetables.
GRANDMOTHER'S ROAST CHICKEN & GRAVY - This roast chicken recipe is really a good one. It differs only slightly from my usual one. I do normally use lemon and thyme for my roast chickens, and plenty of butter, but I have also used garlic in the past. This recipe uses chopped lemon thyme. If you can't get that, then add a bit of finely grated lemon zest to the chopped thyme. A whole lemon is quartered and put into the cavity which helps to create even more flavor and moistness. Crisp skin. Tender meat. Delicious gravy, just what you would expect from Grandma!
Yield: 4
Author: Marie Rayner

Pot Roasted Chicken
Prep time: 15 MinCook time: 1 H & 15 MTotal time: 1 H & 30 M
Ingredients
- 1 TBS sunflower oil
- 1 medium sized roasting chicken (about 4 pounds in weight)
- 6 ounces (175g) bacon lardons or chopped thick sliced bacon
- 1 large onion, peeled and coarsely chopped
- 8 small cloves of garlic, peeled and thinly sliced
- 2 fresh sprigs of rosemary, leaves stripped and roughly chopped
- 1 cup (240ml) of good quality apple cider
- 2/3 cup (180ml) of good quality chicken stock
- 4 small eating apples
- 3 1/2 TBS butter, softened, divided
- 2 tsp sugar
- freshly grated nutmeg
- 2 1/2 TBS plain all-purpose flour
- 2 TBS heavy cream
- 1 TBS chopped fresh flat leaf parsley
- fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350*F/180*C/ gas mark 4. Place the oil into a small flameproof casserole or roaster (with a lid) which is large enough to fit the chicken snugly.
- Pat your chicken dry and season inside and out with some salt and pepper.
- Heat the oil in the casserole and then brown the chicken in the heated oil on all sides. Once it is browned all over, remove to a plate and set aside.
- Add the bacon to the casserole and cook, stirring frequently, over medium heat until golden brown. Toss in the onions. Cook and stir for a few minutes longer until they begin to soften. Add the garlic and rosemary and cook, stirring, for several minutes longer. Add the cider.
- Cook over high heat at a vigorous boil until the liquid has reduced by two thirds. Place the chicken back into the casserole. Pour in the stock. Cover with a layer of aluminum foil and then place the lid snugly on top. Roast in the preheated oven for 1 hour.
- While the chicken is cooking, peel, core and quarter the apples.
- Melt half of the butter in a skillet. Add the apples and fry them for a few minutes until they start to brown. Turn the slices over and sprinkle with the sugar and nutmeg. Continue to cook for several minutes longer until they are nicely golden and tender. Remove from the heat and set aside. Keep warm
- When the chicken is cooked through and tender, lift it out onto a large platter. Cover tightly with foil and leave to rest for about 10 minutes.
- Put the flameproof casserole over medium heat and simmer until the cooking juices are reduced and full of lovely flavors.
- Rub the remaining butter and the flour together. Drop this into the reduced chicken juices, whisking constantly, simmering until the mixture starts to bubble and thicken. Whisk in the heavy cream. Taste and adjust seasoning as necessary with additional salt and black pepper. Stir in the parsley and the apple.
- Carve the chicken and serve on heated plates with some of that delicious sauce spooned over top.
Did you make this recipe?
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Colemans, the mustard people, recently launched an innovative Instant Gravy Paste range consisting of Beef, Chicken and Onion flavours. I was sent a few tubes to try out.
Colman’s Instant Gravy Paste comes in a new tube paste format which has been designed to be both quick and easy to use, allowing customers to make homemade gravy in an instant.
Having used Gravy Powders in the past it was an opportunity for me to try something new. The Toddster is a real gravy man and there is nothing he likes more with his spuds and meat pies than a tasty gravy.
We had some today with plain old Bangers and Mash, the Toddster's favourite meal and I have to say I was very impressed with the ease of use. I just squirted two teaspoons of the paste into a measuring jub and then added boiling water, which I vigourously whisked in using my trusty little whisk. There was no messy powder, or bits that clung in the corners of the jug, and within 30 seconds or so I had a delicious thick and glossy gravy that went very well with our dinner.
I say . . . move over Bisto, there's a new Kid in town and he's out to impress! Coleman's Instant Gravy Paste comes in three delicious flavours, Beef, Chicken and Onion. Beef and chicken are made with real meat juices, and the onion flavour uses real roasted onions.
Just perfect to serve with a multitude of dishes . . . here's a few suggestions to get your tastebuds tingling!
Roast Chicken Pie
Brussel Sprouts and Mushroom Ragout with Herby Dumplings
Slow Roasted Lamb Shoulder
Roast Pork with Crispy Cracklin
Maybe a Pork and Roots Tray Bake with an Apple Relish.
Perfectly Cooked Roast Beef.
Mini Meatloaves and Mash.
Meatballs and Gravy
Sausage and Bacon Toad in the Hole
Lemon and Garlic Roast Chicken
Pot Roasted Chicken
The Whole Christmas Feast (or even Thanksgiving!)
Hope this wets your whistle for some good eats and that you will give the Coleman's Gravy Paste a try. It is nice to make gravy from scratch of course, and nothing tastes better than homemade, but if you are looking for a delicious and quick, almost instant low fat and natural alternative, Coleman's Gravy Paste is just the ticket!
Many thanks to the people at Coleman's and Anya for having sent me some to try. (Psst! It also uses up next to no room in the kitchen cupboard, unlike those bulky jars and boxes. That's a real bonus for me and my tiddly kitchen!)
The new Coleman's Beef Gravy Paste Advert. Cute
And cooking in The Cottage today, a delicious French Canadian Tortiere.
So here we are at Boxing Day. Christmas . . . takes forever to arrive and then it is gone in a flash. Trusting you all have a Merry one, with lots of yummy goodies and family, friends and love the whole day through. My dinner pretty much tasted like cardboard, with this rotten cold I have had . . . but I can breathe this morning so things are definitely on the upturn!
Best part of yesterday was watching the grand-kiddos open their pressies on the ipad. What a marvelous invention that is. Just brilliant. I wish that I could do that with all my grand babies, but alas . . . only one son with kids has an ipad. C'est la vie!
To my way of thinking the best part of any roast dinner, Christmas or otherwise . . . is dealing with the inevitable leftovers. I like to come up with different things to do with them . . . of course there is turkey curry and turkey pie, turkey casserole and the like . . . there is no end to the deliciousness that you can achieve with the leftovers.
This is a delicious rice dish that you can either cook fresh rice for or use pre-cooked packaged rice for. You can serve it along side of your turkey curry or whatever . . . or you can add bits of your leftover roast turkey and ham to it and turn it into a main dish. Whatever you choose to do I think you will find that it's easy, delicious and . . . quite different.
Today we're having roast ham with all of the trimmings as the Missionaries are coming over. I do love to spoil them. Whatever you are having today . . . I hope you enjoy. Happy Boxing Day.
*Curried Cranberry and Pistachio Rice*
Serves 6 as a tasty side dish
Printable Recipe
This recipe is great to use with freshly cooked rice or leftover cooked rice. You can also add chopped leftover chicken, ham, pork, turkey or lamb for even more deliciousness.
5 cups of cooked basamati rice
2 TBS coconut oil
3 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
2 tsp dried thyme
a knob of butter
2 TBS medium curry powder
2 tsp soy sauce
2 TBS chicken broth, or vegetable broth
1/2 cup dried cranberries
1/2 cup shelled pistachio nuts, coarsely chopped
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Heat the coconut oil in a large frying pan.over medium low heat. Add the pistachio nuts and cook, stirring until they begin to toast. Add the butter, thyme, garlic and curry powder. Cook until the mixture becomes very fragrant. Add the chicken broth, soy sauce and the rice. Stir well to combine, adding more broth if necessary to keep the rice moist. Cook over medium high heat until heated through and the rice is hot. Season to taste with salt and pepper and stir in the cranberries. Remove from the heat and serve.
By the way, I've had a couple of comments lately that were quite negative. One complaining that my Boulangere Potatoes were horrible and another saying the same thing about my Lemon Poppyseed Muffins. This is my reply . . . Cooking is subjective and variable. I simply cook what I think are good recipes and sound recipes and I show you MY results. I invite you to try them out yourself. I am not responsible for what happens in your kitchen, with your equipment, your cooking methods, or for your own personal tastes. I simply show you my own experience and if it's a bad one, I will tell you . . . if it's a good one, likewise. I apologize if you haven't had the same experience, but that is life. We all see things from our own eyes. I take pictures and I am not the best photographer in the world. I just click and shoot. The things I make look tasty because they are tasty. I can't help it if you don't agree. Taste is subjective too. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
I am very fond of Chinese food of any kind, although to be sure I have never actually had any "real" Chinese food. I have only ever had the Westernised stuff, which is good enough for me. You would think that Westernised Chinese food would be the same all over the place, but that isn't the case. Chinese food here in the UK, is somewhat different to the kind I was used to back home. Its still pretty tasty however.
As a young bride I can remember going to a place in Granville Ferry back home, called The Continental Kitchen. It was an old farm house that had been converted to a restaurant. People came from miles and miles away to eat there. You had to book ahead it was so popular. They did all you can eat Buffets. All homemade from scratch food. They had both a seafood and a Chinese buffet.
Later on when I moved out to Western Canada, my ex and I used to go out for a Chinese meal every now and then. We would dress up in our finest duds and go to this place in downtown Calgary. It would be a really special evening for us. My ex BIL was also very good at cooking Chinese food. He would make lovely Chinese meals for us that I always really enjoyed. I know they were a lot of work, preparing all of the vegetables and meats, sauces etc. I always really appreciated all that he did. It was so delicious!
One of my favourite dishes at the buffets, aside from the sweet and sour chicken and the broccoli beef has always been the chicken wings. There is something incredibly yummy about those little bits of skin and fat and chicken meat, seasoned perfectly the way they do it, and then fried until crisp. I think they were very popular with everyone, because they always seemed to be almost empty whenever I would go to get some. You had to be quick!
This recipe I am sharing today is a play on those, albeit quite a bit healthier. Yes, healthier . . . but but every bit as tasty . . . . believe it or not . . . . maybe even tastier! A bold statment I know!
I cut boneless skinless chicken breasts into strips (do it diagonally, for some reason the shape is nicer) and soak them in dark soy sauce and then I coat them in a special seasoning I create which uses things you probably have in your kitchen right now.
Montreal steak seasoning, lemon pepper seasoning and coarsely ground black pepper, that is all. I make my own lemon pepper seasoning because it is a very difficult ingredient to find over here in the UK, but you really do need to have it. It adds a unique layer to the flavours. If you would like to know how I make mine, just ask. It does involve a bit of time and oven cooking to dry out the lemon zest.
Once coated the chicken strips are baked in a hot oven . . . 8 minutes on one side, and then 5 to 6 minutes on the other side. (I flip them after the first 8 minutes) I think any longer than that they would dry out. These timings keep them just moist and delicious.
They have a bit of a spark, yes, but it is a spark that I heartily enjoy! I like to serve them with a homemade sweet and sour sauce for dipping.
It goes really well with the flavours of the chicken and is also really easy to make. I am betting you already have everything in the kitchen now to make the sauce right now as well . . .
Apricot jam, tomato ketchup, rice wine vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce . . . that's it. I blitz it together in my mini food chopper because I like it to be smooth.
This is the one I use, the Cookhouse Premium 400W Mini Food Processor. I won this recently in a giveaway and have stopped using my old one altogether. This one is so easy to use and to clean (always important). It makes short work of throwing this sauce together. Just pile it all into the glass base, pop the lid on and blitz. It works by pressing down on the lid, and has two speeds. I really love it and have been using it just about every day. Mine came from here. Its really a beautiful piece of kit.
You will love this sweet and sour sauce. Its thick and flavourful with just the right amount of sweet and sour. Its a sauce we use often in our house, on everything from salmon to chicken to pork and even lamb. I haven't tried it with beef yet, but it would probably be great with meatballs!
*Salt & Pepper Chicken Strips*
Serves 4
Spicy and finger licking good!
900g boneless skinless chicken breast, cut into strips (2 pounds)
2 TBS soy sauce
2 tsp Montreal Steak Spice
1/2 tsp coarsely ground black pepper
1/2 tsp lemon pepper seasoning
for the sauce:
235g of apricot preserves (3/4 cup)
3 TBS soy sauce
3 TBS tomato ketchup
1 tsp rice wine vinegar
1 1/2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
Pre-heat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Spray a foil lined baking sheet with nonstick cooking spray.
Place
the soy sauce into a bowl. Combine the spices and seasonings in a
plastic bag. Roll the chicken strips in the soy sauce and then shake
them in the plastic bag to coat with the seasonings. Place in a single
layer on the baking sheet. Bake for 8 minutes, flip over and bake for a
further 8 to 10 minutes, or until the juices run clear, and they are
golden brown.
While the chicken is cooking, put
all of the sauce ingredients into a deep wide mouthed jar and blitz
with a stick blender, or alternatively blitz together in a regular
blender/food processor until smooth.
Oh boy but these are some tasty. I served mine with some steamed rice and vegetables. Juicy, tender chicken with a bit of a spicy bite . . . and that tangy sweet and sticky sauce . . . what a beautiful combination this is. If you can resist this, you are a much better than me. I love how quick and easy it is as well. BONUS! I love taking something I love and then making it a bit healthier, don't you? Baked, not fried. No skin. Even tastier in my opinion! Bon Appetit!
This past week all of our friends across the pond in Canada celebrated their annual Thanksgiving holiday and in November our friends in America will be doing the same. We don't do Thanksgiving over here in the UK, but we do love our Turkey's for Christmas and I thought it would be fun to share some of my turkey cooking tips with you all today.
I like to purchase a top quality bird for my holiday feasts, be it Thanksgiving or Christmas. This is the one time of the year I will splurge and get a higher cost bird, and it goes without saying that I always choose free range and fresh if I can get it. I may eat turkey minced, or in bits the rest of the year . . . but it is only this once a year that I cook the whole bird, so it is a real treat for us! (Christmas for us.)
I always remove all of the wrapping from my bird and let it sit in the refrigerator for at least 24 hours unwrapped to help dry the skin out well. That makes it a lot easier to rub any butter on and helps for nicely browned skin. I also take it out at least an hour before cooking, which brings it to room temperature. A cold bird put into a hot oven is a bit of a shocking experience and tightens up the tissue . . . we don't want a tough bird. Moist and succulent is the order of the day.
To ensure a nicely moist turkey, I like to rub a lot of butter into the flesh beneath the skin, and on top of the skin. Now you can add seasonings and herbs to it, like I have done here today, which also adds extra flavour. Sometimes I just slip a few sprigs of thyme, some salt, pepper and sage in with the butter, which works well also. A bit of broth in the roasting tin and a few aromatic veggies and Bob's your Uncle. Put that tasty bird over top of it all on a rack and start roasting!
I like to start mine off at a high temperature to assist in the browning, but after that I reduce the temperature to as low as it is safe to go and slow roast, basting it every 15 to 20 minutes with broth and more butter, or the pan juices. (I know . . . but it's Thanksgiving/Christmas!) If it starts to get too dark, I will tent it with some foil.
It's really important that once your bird is done you set it aside, keep it warm and allow it to rest, so that all of those tasty juices will be absorbed back into the bird. If you start to carve it right away, you're going to lose all of that moistness. It will run out all over your cutting board. Be patient. Wait. You'll be rewarded with an incredibly tasty and moist bird.
A lot of people swear by Brining . . . and others by dry brining. I have tried both . . . and to be honest, I want my turkey to taste like a turkey. Dry brining with salt preserves the integrity of the bird . . . and in all honesty it doesn't end up being really salty. Every wet brined bird I have ever cooked ended up tasting like the brine. Not exactly my cup of tea.
This is an excellent video which gives some great instructions on dry brining.
You would be right in thinking that this bird I am showing you here today is not a turkey. It's a chicken. I'll be cooking my turkey at Christmas, but I did want to share a recipe with you that is fabulous when roasting a turkey, but also equally as delish when used on a chicken.
(This is a large free range roasting chicken.)
It involves creating a delicious butter rub which you rub into the flesh beneath the turkey breast, beneath the skin . . . flavoured with a balsamic and maple syrups, shallots, thyme, seasoning salt and . . . lotsa butter! As the turkey cooks that butter melts into the breast meat, flavouring it . . . moistening it, making it all scrummy.
Don't be afraid of butter . . . you're going to skim it off all of the juices anyways . . . and it does help to keep that tasty bird moist and delicious!
I don't stuff my birds with stuffing . . . not a chicken nor a turkey. I like to cook the stuffing separately in a covered dish. It's too iffy . . . you can never really tell if it's cooked properly, and it can keep your turkey from cooking properly as well. Best to be on the safe side and cook it separate. You can flavour your bird from the inside out with other things . . . in this case some orange and onion. I have even shoved bunches of herbs inside the bird with great success . . . but not stuffing. Trust me on this.
However you choose to season your bird . . . if you follow these few tips, you are in for a real treat. (Start with a QUALITY room temperature bird and hot oven, lotsa butter beneath the skin, sear in the oven on high and then roast on low, baste, baste, baste . . . and let it rest before you cut into it!)
*Roasted Turkey with a Balsamic & Maple Rub*
Serves 10 to 14
Printable Recipe
A moist and deliciously different turkey. This rub works wonderfully with a roast chicken as well.
one 5-7kg Turkey, rinsed and
patted dry with paper toweling
For the rub:
2 shallots, peeled and minced
3 TBS pure Maple Syrup
1 TBS Balsamic Glaze (a thick mixture created by boilig
Balsamic vinegar until it becomes thick and syrupy. Use a good
quality.)
1 TBS dark soy sauce
2 tsp dried thyme
1 TBS seasoning salt
4 ounces of butter, at room temperature (1/2 cup)
You will also need:
1 large orange, washed, unpeeled and cut into eighths
3 onions, peeled and coarsely chopped
2 carrots, peeled and sliced
2 cups of chicken or turkey stock (may need more)
Take the turkey from the refrigerator and allow to stand at room temperature for at least an hour before cooking. (To insure a really dry skin surface, I remove it from the wrapping the night before cooking and pat it dry inside and out with paper towels.)
Make the rub by stirring together all of the ingredients until well blended. Taste and adjust seasoning as required.
Preheat the oven to 225*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Have ready a large roasting tin.
Put the carrots and 3/4 of the chopped onions in the bottom of the roasting tin. Pour the stock over all.
Take your turkey and carefully loosen the skin around the main body cavity, sliding your fingers carefully inside to loosen it all over the breast. Take care not to tear the skin. Take the rub and push 3/4 of it under the skin, massaging it into the meat as best as you can. I sometimes find this is easier to do by putting the butter under the skin and then massaging it down the breast from the outside of the skin. Rub the remainder of the mixture on the outside of the turkey. Place the remainder of the onion and the orange wedges inside the cavity of the turkey along with some salt and pepper. Tuck the wings underneath as best as you can and tie the drumsticks together over the opening with some kitchen twine. Place the bird on a rack over top of the vegetables in the roasting pan, breast side up.
Roast in the centre of the oven for 20 minutes. Reduce the oven temperature to 160*C/325*F/gas mark 4 and roast for a further 4 hours, basting every 30 minutes with the pan juices.. When it is done the juices should run clear when the bird is pricked between the thigh and breast. You may need to tent the turkey with foil if it begins to get too dark. You may also need to add more stock if the pan becomes too dry. When it is done, transfer the turkey to a large carving board and tent with foil. Allow to rest for at least 20 to 25 minutes before carving.
Strain the pan juices, discarding any vegetables. Use these juices to make your gravy.
Note - to cook a chicken in this manner, rub with the balsamic and maple mixture in the same manner on a 2kg chicken and roast at 225*c/425*f/ gas mark 7 for 20 minutes. Reduce the temperature to 160*C/325*F/ gas mark 3 for a further 45 to 60 minutes until done and the juices run clear, basting every 15 minutes or so. I don't bother with a rack in this case. I just roast the chicken right on top of the vegetables.
Here are some of the tools I like to use when cooking my holiday bird.
Eddingtons Meat Thermometer for Poultry and Beef. £8.95 from Kitchen Monger.
For another way of roasting your holiday bird, why not try an Oven Roasting Bag. These handy bags from Heuck fit up to 22lb Turkey, and make for a quick and easy clean up. Good for roasting turkey, beef, lamb, pork, chicken or duck, and also available from Kitchen Monger at the price of £3.95 for a package containing two roasting bags.
One of the most difficult things to do is to lift the turkey out of the roasting tin onto a platter. They are heavy and awkward and somewhat cumbersome. I have some really handy Turkey Lifters which make the job a whole lot easier. You just slide them into to the bottom of the turkey at both ends, where the holes won't show and life the turkey out with ease. This particular set from Eddingtons is durable and easy to use and comes in a set of two. Available at Amazon.uk for the price of £2.95
Many thanks to Eddingtons for sending me these products to try out!
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