Monday night was always a night for
roasts in our household. Being a family that placed a lot of store by
food, I think it came from the school of thought that if you started
the week off with a good , sturdy roast, then you were more or less
set, what ever events would unfold themselves later on in the week.
This Monday proved to be rather a
different reason than the fact that the frivolities of the weekend
had passed and that we were now firmly ensconced in the
working week. Truth be told there seems to be very little work to do
and since it is the festive season, but more so this Monday was a day
to celebrate because my sister had arrived from Oz and one of my best
friends had arrived from London.
So there we are, when we celebrate, we
eat and this Monday called for more than just an ordinary roast
chicken, but a festive one.
A note on roast chicken: It is the easiest thing in the world to cook. Once it is in the oven, your work is done.
One of the flavours that rings true of
festivities and the Christmas season has to be a sage stuffing. I
love sage, I have to say and have been planning a blog on the herb
for some time – oh, how evert-day life gets in the way! -–
because it can be used in so many dishes to impart its somewhat fresh
but earthy flavour. And where better to start than in a sage
stuffing?
So for the stuffing:
2 thick slices of seed bread.
1 celery stalk
¼ onion
2 rahsers of bacon
1 T lemon zest
1 T dried sage
salt and pepper
This is easy, easy easy:
Make breadcrumbs out of the two slices
of bread in a blender and pour them into a bowl
Zap up the onion and celery and add
that to the breadcrumbs. Do the same with the bacon.
Season with salt and pepper and add the
sage and lemon zest. Mix the whole lot up and then put ¾ of the
stuffing into the cavity of the chicken and then place the last
quarter carefully under the skin that covers the chicken breasts. Be
careful not to break the skin as you pack the stuffing. Putting the
stuffing here not only creates additional basting for the white meat
that can dry out, it also provides extra flavouring.
Place the bird in a roasting dish.
Roughly chop up the rest of the onion and place around the chicken.
Cook at 180 degrees for about ½ hour.
For the rest: As many carrots and potatoes as you need
In the mean-time, peel as many potatoes
that you may need and then proportionately same amount of carrots.
After the ½ hour, throw these into the same baking pan, adding a few
glugs of olive oil and a generous grinding of salt and black pepper and some sprigs of rosemary.
Return to the oven and allow to cook for another hour at 180 degrees.
For the beans:
1 pkt green beans
1 truss vine baby tomatoes
5 T sunflower seeds or flaked almonds
1 t mustard seeds
2 T butter
1 T olive oil
In a pan, toast the sunflower and mustard seeds. Add the tomatoes, and then the butter and the olive oil. Add the beans and toss. Season with salt and pepper and toss again. Remove from the heat.
To check that the chicken is cooked make a small incision between the thigh and the body and if the juices run clear then the chicken is done.
Lay the beans on a platter. Then put the chicken in the center and surround with the veggies that you've just roasted.
I always make the gravy in the roasting pan that I made the chicken and the veg in. For one thing there are all the spices and the drippings and the flavour of those now wonderfully caramalised onions!
Carve the chicken and voilá!
Oh, a note on the wine: we started on a nice bottle of bubbly with a little bit of finger food. There must be Mediterranean blood in me because we ended up eating at 9:30 pm - but that is no matter because we were chatting and there were hors d'ouvres. We opened a bottle of merlot to have with the dish and it went down extremely well even though we were eating white meat. Sage is quite a strong flavour and so it compliments reds quite well. You don't always have to follow the white wine / white meat rule!
Oh, a note on the wine: we started on a nice bottle of bubbly with a little bit of finger food. There must be Mediterranean blood in me because we ended up eating at 9:30 pm - but that is no matter because we were chatting and there were hors d'ouvres. We opened a bottle of merlot to have with the dish and it went down extremely well even though we were eating white meat. Sage is quite a strong flavour and so it compliments reds quite well. You don't always have to follow the white wine / white meat rule!
Pics to follow!
ReplyDeleteFinally a pic of the chicken being carved :)
ReplyDelete