Skip to main content

Chicken under a Brick ~r

Another recipe from soscuisine.com . . . Hal and I both loved this simple recipe. I didn't have any bricks so I just flattened the chicken as best I could.


Ingredients

aluminum foil
1 tbspolive oil15 mL
1chickens, whole, butterflied , trimmed of excess skin and fat$1.4 kg
salt to taste
ground pepper to taste
1/3 cuplemon juice, freshly squeezed2 lemons

Before you start

Ask your butcher to split the chicken for you or do it yourself using a knife or poultry shears to cut out the backbone, then press down the breast to flatten it as much as possible.

This chicken can be cooked in a pan or using an outdoor grill.

Method

  1. Baste the chicken with the oil. Season with salt and pepper. Wrap the bricks in aluminum foil.
  2. Heat a thick-bottom pan. When the pan is hot, add the chicken, breast side down. Cover the chicken loosely with aluminum foil. Place the wrapped bricks on the chicken (the basic idea is to flatten the chicken by applying a fair amount of weight evenly over its surface).
  3. Cook about 15 min, occasionally checking that the skin becomes golden coloured and adjusting the heat accordingly.
  4. Remove the weights and foil cover, then turn the chicken using a spatula to loosen the skin from the bottom of the pan. Place the foil cover and weights back on top of the chicken then continue to cook until a thermometer inserted into the leg reaches 75°C/165°F, about 20 min (large chickens may take an additional 5 min or so). As an alternative, the chicken may be cooked using an outdoor grill. The bird must be weighted down with the bricks, and covered.
  5. Remove the bricks and cover, then pour the lemon juice over the chicken while it is still hot. Let the chicken stand 10 min, then serve.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Taste of Canada ~ Fiddleheads

I do enjoy fiddleheads.  They have a green bean-y, asparagus-like, pea-ish taste and they are just fun to look at. From Chateline Magazine: HOW-TO It’s Almost Fiddlehead Season! Here’s How To Cook This Springtime Veggie Properly Fiddleheads are a Canadian delicacy, but undercooking them can lead to food poisoning by Amy Grief  Updated Apr 9, 2019 Fiddlehead season is short, so when you see the adorable green curlicues at your grocery store or farmers’ market, buy them while you can. Before chowing down on these little springtime delicacies, there’s a few things you should know first since fiddleheads can cause food poisoning if they’re not cooked properly. What are fiddleheads? These tightly curled coils are ostrich fern fronds. They start appearing in late April and early May in Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick and are usually found in forests, marshes and by rivers and streams. Taste-wise, fiddleheads, which are popular amongst food foragers, are...

Week #2 Challenge: Paper . . . and I mean ALL of your paper.

Annual Organization Challenge Week #2   How did you make out with last week's challenge? Did you find your work table? Here's this week's challenge: Your challenge this week is to  S.P.A.C.E.  your paper - - and I mean ALL of your paper: cardstock, patterned paper, specialty papers, and all those SCRAPS! SORT:  Bring all of your paper to one area. Sort it all into piles: KEEP, SELL, DONATE, TRASH PURGE:  bag up, and assign a price to paper bundles that you want to SELL at a garage sale or online, and put the bags in the garage sale box. Throw out the TRASH pile. Bag up the DONATE pile and immediately make arrangements for drop-off/pick-up or put  in your vehicle. ASSIGN:  separate your paper into categories that make sense to you. For example, you may want to divide it simply into cardstock and patterned paper. If you have a huge stash of paper, you may want to divide it by colour, theme, or manufacturer. **Another way to...

Journal Prompt ~ One Thing You Do Really Well

Name one thing you do really well . . .  One thing I do really well is solve crossword puzzles.