The Crispiest Spring Chicken
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Two Tips for Crispy Roast Chicken
1. Let the chicken stand at room temperature uncovered for one hour before cooking.
2. Pat chicken dry with paper towels so skin doesn’t steam in oven.
If you do these two things, in addition to letting the meat rest for 10 minutes before carving, your roast chicken will be divine — crispy skin, golden brown all around, juicy meat.
I love this chicken recipe not only for its crispy skin but also the sauce, which couldn’t be simpler to make. After the 30 minutes of roasting, you remove the chicken from the platter, and pour a mixture of basil, garlic, red pepper flakes and red wine vinegar over the sheet pan, which deglazes it, removing all of those flavorful crispy bits sticking to the bottom. The chicken then returns to the pan, where it rests for 10 minutes, during which time more juices release and mix with the herbs and vinegar.
That’s it — while the bird rests, the sauce materializes, and it couldn’t be more delicious. I’ve been serving this chicken with lightly dressed mustard greens and fresh bread. This meal — this sauce — demands it.
A Passage from The Dirty Life
A few weeks ago I mentioned I was reading The Dirty Life. Can we pretend we’re in a book club for a moment? I want to share a passage:
First, here’s the background: Author Kristin Kimball left New York City to interview a young farmer named Mark, fell in love, and shortly thereafter started a new life with him on a farm near Lake Champlain. The Dirty Life chronicles their first year at Essex Farm, which currently provides food year-round for over 200 families.
“When we would talk about our future in private, I would ask Mark if he really thought we had a chance. Of course we had a chance, he’d say, and anyway, it didn’t matter if this venture failed. In his view, we were already a success, because we were doing something hard, and it was something that mattered to us. You don’t measure things like that with words like success or failure, he said. Satisfaction comes from trying hard things and then going on to the next hard thing, regardless of the outcome. What mattered was whether or not you were moving in a direction you thought was right. This sounded fishy to me.
This conversation played out many times, with me anxious, Mark calm, until once, as we sat together reviewing our expenses, I was almost in tears. I felt like we were teetering over an abyss. I wasn’t asking him to guarantee that we’d be rich. I just wanted him to assure me that we’d be solvent, that we’d be, as I put it, okay. Mark laughed. “What is the worst thing that could happen?” he asked. “We’re smart capable people. We live in the richest country in the world. There is food and shelter and kindness to spare. What in the world is there to be afraid of?”
I loved this. Isn’t it inspiring? Discuss.
These are the sauce ingredients: olive oil, red wine vinegar, basil (or parsley or whatever herb you like), garlic and crushed red pepper flakes:
To get nice crisp skin and an even golden color, it’s important to dry off those chicken pieces really well:
The chicken roasts with salt, pepper and 1 tablespoon of olive oil for 30 minutes at 450ºF.
Even the breasts are juicy:
Here’s how to quarter a chicken:
First, cut it in half:
Then remove the backbone from the breastbone:
Then, split the breast in half:
Then, remove the backbone from the legs:
This video might offer some guidance, too, but you don’t have to separate the drumstick from the thigh, and you don’t remove the breast from the bone:
The Niskayuna Co-Op carries the most delicious mustard greens. They are so tender and barely require a dressing. For this meal, if I don’t feel like making a dressing, I just arrange the mustard greens on a serving platter, lay the pieces of chicken overtop, and pour all of the juices over everything. The heat of the chicken wilts the greens ever so slightly, and they are just delicious:
PrintThe Crispiest Spring Chicken
- Total Time: 40 minutes
- Yield: 4
Description
Slightly adapted from Martha Stewart
Two Tips for Crispy Roast Chicken
1. Let the chicken stand at room temperature uncovered for one hour before cooking.
2. Pat chicken dry with paper towels so skin doesn’t steam in oven.
If you do these two things, in addition to letting the meat rest for 10 minutes before carving, your roast chicken will be divine — crispy skin, golden brown all around, juicy meat.
Ingredients
- 1 whole chicken (about 4 pounds), quartered and backbone removed, room temperature (see photos/video above for guidance)
- 1 tablespoon plus 1/4 cup (optional, see notes in recipe) extra-virgin olive oil
- kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
- 2 tablespoons red-wine vinegar
- 1 cup packed parsley or basil or tarragon (or whatever), chopped (or pulsed in food processor, see notes)
- 1/2 teaspoon minced garlic (or a couple of cloves, minced with herbs in the food processor)
- 1/2 teaspoon red-pepper flakes, or more or less to taste
Instructions
- An hour before baking, remove chicken from fridge, quarter it (if you haven’t done so already), and let it rest on a cutting board or the rimmed sheetpan you will use to roast it on. Preheat oven to 450 degrees. I find my chicken gets the most evenly golden brown when I roast it on the highest rack. This definitely creates a more smokey oven, but it does work nicely.
- Pat chicken dry really well with paper towels and transfer to rimmed baking sheet (if it’s not already there). Rub chicken with 1 tablespoon oil; season liberally all over with salt and pepper. Arrange, skin-side up and roast until golden (or until a thermometer inserted into thickest part of breast (without touching bone) registers 160 degrees), about 30 minutes.
- Meanwhile, make the sauce. I use the food processor, and because I omit the 1/4 cup olive oil and use the pan juices in stead, (which amount to about 1/4 cup; see notes below for following original recipe), I simply pulse the basil with the garlic, red pepper flakes, and red wine vinegar, then pour this sauce over the sheetpan after the chicken finishes roasting. If you like this idea, when the chicken finishes roasting, transfer it to a plate for a second, pour sauce over the pan, scrape up those crispy bits, return chicken to pan and let it rest for 10 minutes. Just before serving, spoon the sauce over the chicken pieces. I find that waiting to pour the sauce overtop helps keep the skin crispy.
Notes
- This is what the original recipe suggests: Transfer chicken to a plate. Pour off and discard fat from baking sheet; return chicken to pan. Whisk together remaining 1/4 cup oil, vinegar, parsley, garlic, and pepper flakes in a bowl. Season with salt. Spoon sauce over chicken and let stand 10 minutes before serving with accumulated pan juices and sauce.
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 30 minutes
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
74 Comments on “The Crispiest Spring Chicken”
Stumbled upon this recipe about a month ago and have made it twice since then. So amazing! Thank you for teaching me how to quarter a chicken and how to make moist roasted bird! And the sauce, unbelievably yummy with parsley OR basil.
Found this recipe this afternoon, stopped at the grocery store on my way home from work, came home and made it. SO good. I’ll make it again, but not on a weeknight!
I made this dish with white rice and instead of red wine vinager, basil or parsley, I used cilantro and rice wine vinager. Because that’s what I had on hand. The chicken skin was delicious and very crispy and the leg quarters were so juicy! My mother in-law complimented on the skin being so crispy. Needless to say my fiancé loved it. He ate without saying a word until it was all gone !)
Can you use Red Wine instead of rwv in the sauce? I’m thinking if I already have a bottle open… may as well use some of it for cooking…
You probably could, but I think you might want to add a splash of vinegar to the finished sauce because it adds a nice bite and cuts the dressing a bit. But yes, red wine will definitely deglaze the pan nicely and will offer some acidity too. Hope you like it!
My sister and I found your recipe on Pinterest {Where else!?} and I am going through your post reading your tips etc., and thought I would share… I am headed back to my hometown for Easter dinner when we’ll be making this, which is good ol’ Nisky! Such a small world! Glad I found your little slice of the www!
No way!! That is so awesome! I LOVE Nisky. Seriously, as soon as we arrived, it felt like home. I will be heading out of town on Sunday 🙁 but I am happy our paths will somewhat cross 🙂 Hope the chicken turns out well!
Alexandra, have you made this with ramps instead of basil? I may try this tomorrow and I think it would be delish! Also, I have been favoring white balsamic vinegar, which I think would work well here instead of the red wine vinegar, right?
Susanna, hello! So sorry just seeing this. I think ramps would be amazing 🙂 And yes, me, too re white balsamic. That sounds perfect. xo
Can you use dry parsley instead of fresh? I know fresh is better however I don’t normally have it on hand. If doable, how much would you use? Thank you
I’ve made this for years now and it’s always so so good. Crispy golden skin and so juicy every time! I’ve adapted the chimichurri sauce for tri tip roasts too. I always use the pan drippings always amazing. I prefer it over any restaurants chimichurri and my husband told his mom that it’s better than hers. 😳
So happy to hear this, Carri!
I made this recipe a year ago and remember being very impressed. Recently started going through and remaking my saved recipes before adding to my recipe book and impressed again! Thank you so much for a recipe for a juicy delicious chicken! I always have ACV on hand so I used that instead of wine vinegar and it was so good. Definitely going into my recipe book 🙂
So happy to hear this!! I love the cooking method of this one, too 🙂 🙂 🙂
This looks divine! Def going to make it this week. Quick question – shall I salt the chicken the night before like you recommend in your roast chicken recipe? Also, just double the ingredients for the sauce for 2 chickens? Thank you!
Yes and yes! If you have the time, salting in advance makes a difference. And yes, doubling the sauce ingredients will work great 🙂
Bread Toast Crumbs is my favorite cookbook, I purchase a few years ago and I’ve made so many recipes from it. I shop at many of the same local stores a you . Always been able to find ingredients in co op, Albany and Saratoga stores.
I hope you will produce another cookbook soon. I have made a lot from this site as well. I have made your pizza recipe a lot and always comes out perfect!
Recently made this chicken recipe and it’s great. Thank You.
Awwww to nice to read all of this, Sandi! So fun to hear from someone local. And I am actually working on a pizza cookbook right now! It will come out next spring. Thank you for your kind words. Means a lot 🙂 🙂 🙂
Hello Ali.
Regarding your book club moment which was as charming as heck. I would be very suspicious of, “We live in the ricjest country in the world.” I am not American, though worked with them for years in international schools, and do not live there. I think Mark’s statement covers a multitude of actual sins. I read the MSN news daily and despair for the seldom United States,
Mass shootings daily, politics gone completely insane, cruelty out of mind…I’m told that Americans love to read of crime. I’m trying to keep an open mind and if my comments are shouted out of the room as being far from the reality, I will be happy to reconsider.
Meanwhile, thanks for this opportunity. Now back to your cooking and tips which I cannot get enough of.