Published by admin on 16 Feb 2008 at 08:56 pm
Roasting a chicken, mending a broken heart [gag]
Tomorrow is the two month mark. I haven’t cooked since Louie left me. I guess partly because I wasn’t really eating anything other than a take-out meal here and a handful of crackers there. Occasionally I would open a can of black beans and heat it up with some cheese and salsa, or shove some spinach in my mouth while trying to get that last bit of work done for the job I don’t talk about here. It’s been a busy two months, a sad two months and a messy two months.
I told myself I wouldn’t cook in my new kitchen until I had everything put away. But now at the one month mark of living here with two boxes left to unpack and 2 boxes’ contents to wash, and a free Saturday afternoon, I decided to let myself off the hook.
That is one half of my counter space. I’m not exaggerating.
This is the other half.
I decided that if I could roast a chicken in this mayhem, I’d be OK. And roast a chicken I did.
I used Mark Bittman’s recipe for standard Roasted Chicken. I set off the fire alarm several times. I hope I didn’t give myself salmonella.
Mark Bittman’s Roast Chicken Recipe
- 1 whole (3-4 lb.) chicken, trimmed of excess fat, then rinsed and patted dry with paper towels [I rinsed it, but didn’t do much fat trimming or paper towel patting, probably the reason my fire alarm went off.]
- 3 tablespoons olive oil
- 2 teaspoons chopped fresh thyme, rosemary, marjoram, oregano, or sage leaves, or 1 teaspoon dried
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
- Chopped fresh herbs for garnish [didn’t do]
- Preheat oven to 500 degrees F.
- Place the chicken, breast side down, on a rack in a roasting pan. Begin roasting. Mix together the olive oil, herbs, salt and pepper.
- After the chicken has roasted for about 20 minutes, spoon some of the olive oil mixture over it, then turn the bird breast side up. [This is when I opened the oven and my fire alarm got angry.] Baste again, then again after 7 or 8 minutes; at this point the breast should be beginning to brown (if it hasn’t, roast a few more minutes). Turn the heat down to 325 degrees F, baste again, and roast unitl an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh [??? WTF! this was my same problem during our turkey roasting/wine drinking disaster of ’07, I wish I knew what this ‘thickest part’ business meant. Gargh!] reads 160 to 165 degrees F. Total roasting time will be under an hour.
- Before removing the chicken from the pan, tip the pan to let the juices from the birds cavity flow into the pan (if they are red [they were… very bloody….ick] cook another 5 minutes). Remove the bird to a platter and let it rest for about 5 minutes. While it is resting, pour the pan juices into a clear measuring cup, [why a clear measuring cup? Also, who has an opaque measuring cup?] and pour or spoon off as much of the fast as you can. Reheat the juice, carve the bird [FAIL!], garnish, and serve with the pan juice.
I don’t know. After buying a free range organic chicken, factoring in my spices used, my time and frustration with the fire alarm, it’s totally cheaper to get a rotisserie chicken from Gelson’s. I’m also probably less likely to give myself salmonella and more likely to end up with a clean kitchen.
It felt good to get in the kitchen. It’s been too long. Tomorrow night Allie is cooking Sunday dinner, I’m helping. Hopefully we’ll do better than I did tonight.
Wasn’t Salmonella on The Sopranos? ba dump.
I hope you only do Gelson’s every other bird. I like the pictures you take.
Pretty bird!
Even if you die of salmonella (and I hope you don’t) it looked awesome. Rotisserie chickens here are absurdly priced so for me, I’d rather do it at home. You are totally fancy though with your roasting rack and all of that. I have no such luxuries 😉
my girl of 4 years left me in an abrupt fashion about 7 months ago . . . difference is that after she left she made u pfalse charges and tried to have me thrown in jail several times because I could not find her ipod . . . this is after a paid for every bill for her for the past 4 years and she saying that I was holding onto her 150.00 ipod . . . then she borke in a stole my laptop and refuses to give it back.
hey, as least it ain’t thart bad, right?
🙂
break up suck . . . nut bags suck more.
you know?
Oh wow – the chicken looks great! I too have limited counter space and agree with the time and energy and cost issue but at the end of the day, I think it’s nicer to cook something once in a while, as it’s very satisfying.