stevez wrote:That sounds like a great idea. Did you use that bacon press in your picture on top of the chicken?
boudreaulicious wrote:The same technique works for tomatoes and cheese--olive oil, tomato juices and the cheese sub for the chicken fat but the crust that forms with the roasted tomatoes on top are definitely a heavenly slab of goodness. I may have to make this tonight!
Pie-love wrote:I first saw this technique in Dorrie Greenspan's recipe for Poulet for les Paresseux, which is now my go-to recipe for roast chicken:
http://www.food.com/recipe/roast-chicke ... eux-500592
G Wiv wrote:Chicken Bread worked perfectly, was simple, delicious and is something I will do again and again.
G Wiv wrote:LTH,
Zoomed by an Epicurious blurb for Chicken Bread a few weeks ago. Just as I closed the link it occurred to me that it sounded really good. Roast a chicken on top of bread, end up with crispy chicken fat soaked bread for munching, to use as croutons in salad or as a decadent base for a topping.
The idea of roasting chicken on stuff is not new, root veg being common, even over/along side potato, I still remember my first taste of the delicious potatoes at Schwartz's in Montreal roasted underneath spinning chickens on my honeymoon, but high heat over bread, thick sliced sourdough in this case, was a new one on me.
Epicurious called for a whole chicken, I used thighs with a heavy dose of salt/pepper and sprinkle of crushed red. I can write up a recipe if someone really needs the belt/suspenders approach, but the basics are a low sided ovenproof cooking vessel that does not cramp the chicken and bread, but is not so large as to let juice/fat escape without being soaked into the bread.
Lightly coat the bottom of the pan with olive oil, layer thick sliced bread, I used sourdough, top with chicken thighs S/P/crushed red, bake at 425 until skin is crisp and the chicken thighs are 165 internal.
Let rest, eat, repeat.
Chicken Bread worked perfectly, was simple, delicious and is something I will do again and again.
(Bride was out of town, thus the paper plate)
This was truly fantastic with the crisp chicken fat/juice bread the star. Next day I made a salad with the chicken, romaine, radish, olives, torn chicken bread as croutons and a very garlicky dressing. Was so good I had another a few hours later.
Regards,
Gary
buttercream wrote:Hi GWiv- Thanks so much for posting your recipe. I followed your directions, but used some leftover garlic bread in place of the sourdough. It was delicious. The bottom of the bread developed a really delicious crunch while the inside stayed moist. My middle son felt it was soggy, but to me, it was akin to bread pudding texture. What a genius way to use up bread.
spinynorman99 wrote:I woke up daily to the smell of rye bread toasting which he then rubbed with garlic and smeared with schmaltz.
Geo wrote:How could I screw up something so simple? Sheesh.
boudreaulicious wrote:Not sure who "you" is but didn't have the recipe and did exactly that. Sorry if the description was overkill. What is it about this thread????
boudreaulicious wrote:What is it about this thread????
lougord99 wrote:Exactly my thought, so I made it for the first time. The Epicurious recipe calls for a whole chicken which I did. I think next time I will try parts. With a whole chicken, there was not enough bread that didn't burn. The parts would spread out more and cover more bread.
nr706 wrote:For Thursday, I'm thinking of spatchcocking my heritage turkey and cooking it over slightly stale bread. Turkey bread, anyone?
lougord99 wrote:With a whole chicken, there was not enough bread that didn't burn. The parts would spread out more and cover more bread.