Thursday 23rd February 2012

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Recipes - Roast Chicken with Horseradish and Spring Onion

A roast chicken is one of the most traditional of Sunday lunch dishes. I remember as a child that it was served as a treat, although all too often it tasted of the fishmeal it had been fed. As with all other meats, ‘roast' chicken would once have been cooked on a spit in front of a fire, instead of in an oven. A young cockerel would normally have been used, as hens were far too valuable as egg-layers.

Nowadays we can get chickens aplenty, but when cooking them as simply as this - well, it's fairly simple - do try and buy the very best you can, preferably corn-fed and free-range.

Preheat the oven to 200ºC / 400ºF / Gas 6.

Melt 25g (1 oz) of the butter in a small pan. Put half of the chopped spring onions into the butter, and cook, but do not colour. Remove from the heat and stir in the horseradish sauce.

Release the skin on the chicken from the wishbone end, using a finger. Try not to make a hole in the skin. Do this on both sides, to create pockets over both breasts. Push the horseradish mixture into these pockets, then pull the skin back to chicken shape.

Heat the oil in a roasting tray on top of the stove. Colour the chicken on one leg, season and put into the preheated oven, lying on that coloured leg, for 15 minutes. Turn on to the other leg and cook for a further 15 minutes. Turn the chicken on to its back and cook for about a further 20-30 minutes. When cooked (see below), take out of the tray and keep warm.

Pour off excess fat. Put the remaining chopped spring onion into the fat remaining in the roasting tray and colour lightly. Add the wine and boil to reduce by two-thirds. Add the chicken stock and boil to reduce by half. Shake in the remaining butter, cold and diced, and season. Mix in the parsley.

Serve the hot chicken with its gravy.

 

Ingredients

Serves 4

  • 1 x 1.6kg (3 ½ lb) roasting chicken, wishbone removed
  • 85g (3 oz) unsalted butter
  • 8 spring onions, chopped
  • 2 tbsp creamed horseradish
  • 1 tbsp groundnut oil
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 150ml (5 fl oz) dry white wine
  • 150ml (5 fl oz) chicken stock
  • 1 tbsp chopped fresh parsley

Tips

  1. Poultry gets a bad name because it can so easily be overcooked and dry. To see if your chicken is cooked properly, pierce the thickest part (usually the thigh) with a skewer or point of a sharp knife. The juices should run clear. However, you should try to catch the bird just before this happens. I always like to leave my chicken (and other meats) to rest for about 10-20 minutes before carving, when it will continue to cook slowly in its internal heat.
  2. To cut a chicken into serving pieces, rather than a conventionally carve, there is a fair way of doing it. Cut two pieces from each leg, the thigh and drumstick. Cut off the wings, taking with them nearly half of the breast. Serve the plain pieces of breast with the drumsticks to two of your guests; the wings (with some of the breast) and thighs to the other two.