I get why chefs often do all sorts of cheffy things when they’re roasting a chicken. Stuffing them with aromatics, making herb butters to rub under the skin, delicately balancing the chicken on top of chopped up veggies in the baking tray. It all adds a new dimension to a regular chicken. But I like a regular roast chicken! Juicy, tender with a crispy, well-seasoned skin. No fuss and faffing - just a bit of oil and seasoning on top and a lemon wedge or two inside the chicken, and then sling it in the oven while you concentrate on the rest of the roast dinner. And that’s what we’re going with today. This is all I do to my chicken when I’m making a roast chicken dinner. I’ll also show you how to make a tasty simple gravy once that chicken is cooked. No squeezing juices out of vegetable trivets, making a roux with flour or bubbling down wine. Just the quickest and simplest way to get a really good meaty and flavourful gravy.

Reasons I don’t use the trivet method:

Whilst a vegetable trivet can help to keep roasting meat moist, chickens aren’t generally in the oven long enough to dry out (unless it’s overcooked of course). I might use a trivet for something like a brisket – which takes a long time to cook, and needs all the help with moisture it can get, but a good quality chicken doesn’t need it in my opinion.When using a trivet, the meat juices are absorbed into the veggies - this means you need to go to the effort of squeezing out all of those juices if you want to get a flavourful gravy. Granted, roasted veggies can add a bit of extra flavour to the gravy, but you’re still chucking those veggies away once you’ve squeezed them, and that means that at least some flavour is being thrown away.Using a vegetable trivet can mean the meat juices don’t caramelize in the baking tin. That sticky caramelization of meat juices adds so much flavour to gravy. The moisture in the veggies of a vegetable trivet can prevent this caramelization process happening.

Ingredients

For my family of 4, I usually get a 1.5 - 2kg whole chicken (free-range) which is perfect for a roast dinner and enough for leftovers too 🙂

How do we make it?

Drizzle oil onto a medium-sized chicken that’s been out of the refrigerator for 30-45 minutes. Rub the oil into the skin with your hands and sprinkle on salt, pepper and thyme. Place two lemon wedges inside the chicken.Place the chicken in the oven for approx. 1 hour 20 to 1 hour 30 minutes – until the skin is golden and the juices run clear.Remove from the oven and leave to rest for 10 minutes on a warm plate while you make the gravy.

For the gravy

Place the roasting tin on the hob and heat over a medium heat.Sprinkle on the crumbled stock cubes, and stir together whilst pouring in the hot vegetable water. Bring to the boil and lightly season with salt and pepper.Stir in a the cornstarch slurry using a whisk, until the gravy thickens.Stir in ¼ tsp of gravy browning if you like a darker gravy, then pour the gravy into a warm gravy jug.

What if my chicken comes with giblets?

Giblets are sometimes packaged up and placed inside the cavity of the chicken. You might be more likely to find the packaged giblets in a bird from a farm shop or butcher. Supermarket birds don’t usually include them. The giblets generally include the neck, heart and liver of the chicken. Always remove the giblets (especially if they’re in a plastic bag) before roasting the chicken. The neck and heart can be boiled up in water for a few hours to make a stock. Don’t include the liver though, as this can make the stock bitter.

Should I wash the chicken before roasting it?

Nope. It’s not a good idea to wash your chicken. Minute water droplets from water being splashed about when washing a raw chicken can spread bacteria from the chicken onto hands, clothes and work surfaces. This bacteria will be killed during the cooking process, so long as the chicken is fully cooked through, so there’s no need to wash it first.

If you have a steam-assisted oven

If you have a steam-assisted oven, cook the chicken at the same temperature as per the recipe card. Add low or medium steam during the whole of the cooking. The circulation of the steam around and inside the chicken will likely reduce the cooking time slightly. For a 1.5kg chicken, I would cook it for around 10 or 15 minutes less (so around 1 hour 10 minutes). Always ensure the chicken is cooked throughout, no longer pink and the juices run clear.

What to do with Leftover Chicken

First of all I ALWAYS (actually I get Chris to do this), remove all of the shreds and leftover bits of chicken meat and then make Chicken Stock and put it in the freezer. Its such a simple thing but tastes so much better than shop-bought. For the veggies, I like to keep it simple with some Green Beans and Simple Butter Pepper Carrots. When it gets closer to the festive season I do like to add Sprouts to my roast dinner table too. Chris will ALWAYS ask for Cauliflower Cheese. 😉 For the potatoes, I almost always serve Crispy Roast Potatoes and Creamy Mashed Potatoes If I’m feeling a little posh I might do some Dauphinoise Potatoes instead. Chris and the Kids ALWAYS ask me to make a batch of Yorkshire Puddings too!

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Recipe Video

Stay updated with new recipes!Subscribe to the newsletter to hear when I post a new recipe. I’m also on YouTube (new videos every week) and Instagram (behind-the-scenes stories & beautiful food photos). If you want a variation on the classic roast chicken dinner then you need to take a look at my Curry Roast Chicken, all cooked in one pan, its always on our recipe rotation. This post was published Mar 2020, updated in Oct 2020 with additional hints and tips and for housekeeping reasons.

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