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Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic

Monday, 17 December 2018

Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 


A well roasted chicken is a beautiful thing to behold . . .  moist and tender, almost succulent, with a crisp and flavourful skin.  I think of all the roasts, it is one of my favourites.

Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 

There are a few rules to follow when roasting a chicken, first one being, buy the best chicken that you can afford to buy.  For me it is always a free range organic corn fed chicken.  They taste the best.  Because there are only two of us, this chicken will easily do us for three meals, and give the dog some treats also.  It is affordable for us, but I understand for a larger family this might not be practical, so just buy the best chicken you can afford for your money.

Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 

Baste, baste, baste.  If you baste your chicken frequently, you will end up with a juicier, more flavourful chicken with a nice crisp skin.  Its simple really. You can roast it on a rack, or on a trivet of vegetables.  I like the trivet of vegetables because you end up with some really tasty vegetables at the end of it. (Any root vegetable works well. Just peel and place in the bottom of your roaster, cutting them into similar sized pieces and place the seasoned chicken on top.)

Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 

Garlic and lemon work with chicken to form a trinity of delicious flavours. In this instance, the chicken itself is filled with four peeled and bruised garlic cloves, a small onion peeled and quartered, one half lemon and its juice, and a nice sprig of fresh thyme.  Simple.


Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 

You can brush it with either melted butter or some olive oil, and sprinkle it with some herbs.

Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 

Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme . . .  just like the song . . . along with some salt and black pepper. 


Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 

Sometimes I will push some butter in between the skin of the breast and the chicken, but today I was going for simple without any faffing about.  


Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic  

Roasted long and slow in a moderate to low oven (165*C/325*F/ gas mark 3) and basting every fifteen minutes or so gave us the tastiest results ever, and plenty of lovely juices for making a tasty gravy with.  Your chicken is done when the juices run clear when pricked between the thigh and the breast, and then the bone in the drumstick wiggles easily.

Yield: 4 - 5Author: Marie Rayner

Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic

prep time: 10 minscook time: 2 hourtotal time: 2 hours and 10 mins
Buy the best roasting chicken you can afford and roast it this way, and you will aways be happy with the results.

ingredients:

1 roasting chicken, (1.75 - 2.2 KG) (3 1/2 - 5 lb.) in weight
1 small onion, peeled and quartered
4 fat cloves garlic, peeled and bruised
1 large sprig of dried thyme
1/2 small  lemon
1 TBS olive oil or melted butter
1/4 tsp each salt, pepper, and dried thyme, parsley, sage and rosemary
4 tsp flour
250ml chicken stock (1 cup)

instructions:

Preheat the oven to 165*C/325*F/ gas mark 3.
Remove
 any giblets from the chicken and pat dry.  Insert the sprig of thyme,
quartered onion, garlic cloves and 1/2 lemon (squeezing in the juice and
 throwing in the crushed lemon) into the cavity of the chicken.  Tie
legs together.  Place onto a roasting rack in a roasting tin  Brush the
outsides with the olive oil or melted butter.  Mix together the salt,
pepper and dried herbs.  Sprinkle over the chicken.

Roast
 in the preheated oven for 1 3/4 to 2 hours (for smaller chicken) or up
to 3 hours (for larger chicken).  The juices should run clear and a meat
 thermometer inserted in the thigh should register 85*C/185*F when
done.  Transfer to a platter, tent with foil and let stand for 20
minutes before carving.
Skim any fat from the
 juices in the roasting tin, and discard. Sprinkle flour over the juices
 in the pan.  Cook, stirring, over medium heat for several minutes. Pour
 in the chicken stock and any accumulated juices from the platter. 
Bring to the boil, stirring constantly, until thickened.  Cook over low
heat for about 5 minutes.  Strain into a gravy boat to serve.
How to Carve a Chicken: 
 Cut through any string holding the legs together. Remove anything from
the cavity (onions, etc.) and discard, tipping any juices into the gravy
 pan.  Using kitchen scissors, cut chicken in half along backbone and
breastbone. Cut around the natural crease at thigh to make two breast and two
 leg portions.  Cut the breasts in half diagonally, and cut the thighs
separate from the drumsticks at the joints.
Created using The Recipes Generator


Roast Chicken with Lemon & Garlic 

Again going or simple, I served this with plenty of mash, some stove top stuffing and green beans.  Everyone was happy.  We also got a dinner of hash which I made with cubed potatoes, leftover chicken and leftover stuffing. (I served with baked beans) and  I have a lovely carcass to make a soup with.  Oh, and Mitzie has gotten two meals from it also.  (I mix a few TBS of it with some of her dry kibble.  She is in heaven!)  You can never go wrong with a Roast Chicken. Never. Bon Appetit! 



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Cherry Cake Squares

Sunday, 16 December 2018


Cherry Cake Squares 

What a miserable horrible lousy rotten day it is out there today.  Windy, rainy, cold . . .  but at least its not snow!  
 
In any case the lighting for my photos is horrible, but I hope you don't mind too much, and that it won't deter you from making one more holiday square for your cookie trays! 


Cherry Cake Squares 

Its an old, old Maritime Recipe from back home.  You will find it printed on the pages of many a community or church cookbook. 
 
This is a pretty regular bake for most family celebrations over the holidays.


Cherry Cake Squares 

Its a pretty basic batter . . .  a  Blondie type of bar, but with white sugar instead of brown. They bake up dense and chewy . . . . 
 
Just like the perfect blondie should be.


Cherry Cake Squares 

It is filled with lots of glace cherries.  I have used a mix that I was able to get which had golden, dark and light red and green cherries.  
 
Jewel like!  You could use maraschino cherries if you can't get the glace ones.

Cherry Cake Squares 

Whichever cherries you use, rinse them well and dry them so that they don't all sink to the bottom when the squares are baking.


Cherry Cake Squares 

 They are slathered after baking and cooling with a luscious butter cream icing.  Oh boy  . . .  so good. 


Cherry Cake Squares 

These are so rich and sweet, that only a small square will suffice per serving.  I cut them into 1 inch squares.

Cherry Cake Squares 

They do sink in the middle when you take them out of the oven, but don't worry about that.  They are supposed to do that. 
 
I just trim off the edges and keep them as cuts to enjoy with hot drinks . . .  the centre part is the bit I ice and save for good. 


Cherry Cake Squares 

These freeze very well.  Even with the icing.  Just ice, decorate and cut, then freeze them in an airtight container.


Cherry Cake Squares 

I put baking paper between the layers to keep them separate and from sticking together. 


Cherry Cake Squares 

They are a really pretty addition to your holiday baking/cookie trays!


Cherry Cake Squares  

Todd had to enjoy one right away with a hot cup of herbal tea. I will have to hide the others, or they will be gone. 
 
 I know enough not to eat these myself.  I would be suffering if I did.  Far too sweet for me to be able to enjoy, even the offcuts.



Yield: 25Author: Marie Rayner

Cherry Cake Squares

prep time: 15 minscook time: 55 minstotal time: 70 mins
An old Maritime recipe from back home. Wouldn't be Christmas without these dense glace cherry filled Blondie type squares topped with a sweet butter cream icing! These also freeze very well and are a great addition to the Holiday Cookie Tray.

ingredients:


225g butter, softened (1 cup)
300g granulated sugar (1 1/2 cups)
2 large free range eggs, lightly beaten
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 tsp almond extract
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp each soda and salt
280g plain flour (2 cups)
190g glace cherries, quartered (1 cup)
(rise with warm water and dry)

To ice:
260g sifted icing sugar (2 cups)
115g butter, softened (1/2 cup)
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 - 2 TBS milk
halved glace cherries to decorate

instructions:

Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.  Line an 8 inch square baking tin with baking paper and set aside.
Cream
 together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs,
 one at at time.  Beat in the vanilla and almond extracts.  Whisk
together the flour, baking powder, soda and salt.  Stir into the creamed
 mixture until well combined.  The dough will be very stiff.  Fold in
the prepared cherries.  Spread into the prepared baking tin in an even
layer.  Bake in the preheated oven for 45 to 55 minutes until golden
brown and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean.  Set on a
wire rack to cool completely, before frosting.

To
 make the icing, beat together the sugar, butter, vanilla and just
enough milk to give you a thick, fluffy, creamy mixture.  Spread evenly
on the cold squares.  Decorate with halved cherries.  Cut into 1 inch
squares to serve.

Created using The Recipes Generator 




Cherry Cake Squares 

I wish I could show you how lousy the weather looks from my window near where my desk it.  Its just horrible.  If it was snow, we would be in the middle of a blizzard! Now that would be perfectly charming.
 
  
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at: mariealicejoan at aol dot com Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again! 
 
 
 Follow my blog with Bloglovin  






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Melted Snowman and Rudolf Chocolate Barks

Saturday, 15 December 2018

Melted Snowman Bark 

I wanted to make something special for the children of our Ministering brothers (father and son, church thing)  for Christmas.  They are always so good at visiting us.  
 

When Todd had his cancer and was going through treatments, the children came over to us one night and had made him cards and had some cookies they had baked for him along with some cards they had made. 


Melted Snowman Bark 

They are a lovely family.  Their dad was coming over yesterday to pick up our tropical fish which we have re-homed with them and so I thought I would make them some goodies to enjoy over the holidays as well.

Melted Snowman Bark 

I had seen melted snowmen bark all over the internet and so decided to make some for them.  It was really simple to make. You just melt white chocolate and spread it out on a prepped pan . . .  
 
I used Dr Oetker white chocolate for bakers, broken into squares. (Melted in the microwave according to the package directions.)

Melted Snowman Bark 

Add halved mini peanut butter cups for the hats . . .  some googly eyes . . .

Melted Snowman Bark 

Black candy balls for the buttons. (I picked out the dark balls from the Dr Oetker Midnight magic cake decs)

Melted Snowman Bark 

Yellow and orange candy strands (Again I picked them out of a bottle of mixed candy strands from Dr Oetker) for the noses  .  .  .


Melted Snowman Bark 

And broken pretzel sticks for the arms.  In between I scattered white snowflake candies, then popped the tray in the fridge to chill. 


Rudolf Bark 

For the Rudolf bark, I used Dr Oetker milk chocolate for bakers, broken up  . . .  which I melted in the microwave and spread out on the prepped pan. 
 
Make sure you don't overheat your chocolate or it will seize. I do it for one minute, then let it sit, stir, and if it needs more then reheat at 10 second intervals. Just what the package says.

Rudolf Bark 

For the antlers I used white chocolate coated smallish pretzels.  You can easily cut them in half without breaking them by using a sharp knife and carefully sawing down through the centres.

Rudolf Bark 

I put the googly candy eyes on first . . .  and then I placed the antlers above, trying to place them with the cut edges outwards, rounded edges in the middle/bottom . . .  
 
Don't look too closely as I messed up a few by putting them on backwards, lol

Rudolf Bark 

I used red smarties for the noses.  I actually bought  tube of "Rudolf noses" to use for this.  They worked perfectly.
 
You could use any kind of red candy that you can find so long as it is size appropriate. 


Rudolf Bark 

Once again, in between I scattered some candy snowflakes, which really added a lovely festive touch and a bit of contrast with the darkness of the chocolate.


Rudolf Bark  

Altogether they turned out really nicely.  I think they did at any rate, and the children's father was oohing over them when he came to pick up the fish.  I really think that the children will love them.  I can't imagine any child not enjoying something like this! 


Yield: 2 different kindsAuthor: Marie Rayner

Chocolate Christmas Bark

Children love this. Its fun to make together.  There are two kinds.  Melting snowman using white chocolate and Rudolf using milk chocolate.  This also makes fabulous gifts!

ingredients:

For the Melting Snowmen:
300g white chocolate, created for bakers (26% cocoa butter) (10 1/2 ounces)
6 mini Reese's peanut butter cups, carefully cut in half
24 candy eyes
Orange or yellow sugar strands
(you will need to pick them out of a container of mixed strands)
36 small dark navy candy ball decs
Pretzel sticks
small candy snowflake decs

For the Rudolf:
300g milk chocolate for bakers ( with 35% cocoa solids) (10 1/2 ounces)
24 candy eyes
12 white chocolate covered pretzels, carefully cut in half through the middle
12 red smarties
small candy snowflake decs

instructions:

Line two separate baking trays with baking paper or
waxed paper or aluminium foil.  I like to make one batch first and then
the other batch after.

Melt the white chocolate
 for the snowmen in the microwave according to the package directions,
in a microwave appropriate bowl.  Pour onto one of the baking sheets and
 spread out to a 1/3 inch thick layer.   Place all of the snowman parts
onto the chocolate spreading them out and building one at a time.  The
half peanut butter cup is the hat, then the candy eyes, a sugar strand
nose, navy candy ball buttons and broken pretzel sticks for the arms.
Repeat until you have used them all up. Scatter snowflakes in between. 
Place in the refrigerator to chill while you make the other one.

Melt
 the milk chocolate for the reindeer in the microwave according to the
package directions, in a microwave appropriate bowl.  Pour onto the
other prepared baking sheet and spread out to a 1/3 inch thick layer. 
Build your Rudolf's as follows and one at a time.  Put the googly eyes
on, followed by a red smarties nose just below.  Place two pretzel halves
 (rounded side in and loop towards the eyes) on top to resemble
antlers.  Repeat until you have used all the ingredients.  Scatter small
 snowflakes in between.  Place in the refrigerator to chill.
Carefully
 break into pieces, using a knife to guide the breaks.  If you are
giving as gifts, leave whole and present on a board wrapped in
cellophane and tied with a ribbon.

Created using The Recipes Generator



Rudolf Bark 

If you are keeping this you can break it up.  I find it best to mark lines with a sharp knife first and then break it on the lines.  If you are gifting this, pop it onto a small cutting board, wrap in cellophane and tie up with some coloured ribbons.  Very festive! 

This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at: mariealicejoan at aol dot com Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again! 

Follow my blog with Bloglovin 





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Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks

Thursday, 13 December 2018

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

I really need to get better at labelling things when I put them in the freezer.  I took out what I thought was chicken breasts the other day and it ended up being turkey steaks!  I always think I will remember what I am putting in there, but I never do!  Does anyone else have that problem? Tell me I am not alone in this!  Please!


Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 


Its the same with leftover stews and such.  I pop them into plastic containers and think to myself, I'll remember what this is . . .  and then I don't!  We often dine on mysterious things that aren't known to me until they are thawed, LOL.  That's me!


Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

So anyways, I had these turkey steaks that I had to do something with and so I put my thinking cap on. This is what I came up with!

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

Its really, really simple. There is no browning of the steaks ahead of time.  You just lay them in the baking dish, and pour the sauce over top. 


Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

Less than half an hour in the oven and you have perfectly cooked tender turkey steaks with a delicious sauce to spoon over top. 


Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

The sauce is really simple.  Its just a combination of mayonnaise, black cherry jam and some BBQ sauce. You can use your favourite kind of BBQ sauce.  Its really simple.  I haven't used low fat mayonnaise so I can't speak to how that would work.

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

The quantities I have given are for  one serving, but you can easily multiply the amounts to serve more people. 

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

If you don't have turkey steaks, you could also use chicken breasts, or thighs.  I would use boneless, and thighs would take longer to cook than breasts.  You could also use bone in chicken, which again would take even longer. 

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

If you are using bone in poultry, I would cover them first, or maybe even just season and cook them  for about half an hour before spooning the sauce over top and cooking them until tender. (Do baste.  YUM!)

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

This sauce would also go very well on Salmon fillets I think.  I would brown them in a skillet for several minutes on both sides until done, and then just heat the sauce ingredients together in a saucepan, spooning the sauce over the finished fish to serve.

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

We had them with some scalloped potatoes and a vegetable.  This was really, really nice.


Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks  

So we ended up with an unplanned surprise of a dinner that was really, really delicious! I love it when that happens!

Yield: variableAuthor: Marie Rayner

Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks

prep time: 5 minscook time: 25 minstotal time: 30 mins
Tender and delicious with a scrumptious sauce. I am giving the quantities for one. Just multiply for however many turkey steaks you are cooking!

ingredients:

1 Turkey steak
1 TBS black cherry jam
1 TBS good quality mayonnaise
1 TBS your favourite BBQ sauce
Salt and black pepper to taste

instructions:


Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.  Lay
your turkey steak(s) out in a baking dish just large enough to hold them
 comfortably.  Season them to taste. Whisk together the remaining
ingredients until smooth and well combined.  Spoon over the turkey
steak.  Bake in the preheated oven for 20 to 25 minutes, turning them
over  once or twice and basting them.  At the end of that time they
should be nicely glazed and the juices should run clear.  Take care not
to over cook them, or they will be dry. You want them just cooked
through and still moist.  You can double the quantities of the sauce if
you want more sauce.  Serve hot with the thickened sauce spooned over
top.
Created using The Recipes Generator



Black Cherry Sauced Turkey Steaks 

Perfectly cooked, tender and delicious with plenty of sauce. Quick and simple to make, using simple ingredients you probably already have in the house and serving as few or as many as you want to feed. What more could you ask for!  Bon Appetit! 



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Welcome, I'm Marie

Welcome, I'm Marie
Canadian lover of all things British. I cook every day and like to share it with you!
A third of my life was spent living in the UK. I learned to love the people, the country and the cuisine. I have always been an Anglophile. You will find plenty of traditional British recipes here in my English Kitchen. There are lots of North American recipes also, but then again, I am a Canadian by birth. I like to think of my page as a happy mix of both. If you are looking for something and cannot find it, don't be afraid to ask! I am always happy to help and point you in the right direction, even if it exists on another page, or in one of my many cookbooks.

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