Empire roast chicken

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

This recipe is an adaptation from Jamie’s Great Britain, our recipe book for this week.  Jamie says of this roast chicken recipe in the introduction -  Ask any British person what their two favourite meals are and I reckon most people would say their mum’s roast chicken, and a curry. Well, welcome to Empire roast chicken, a combination of both of those things. Your friends and family are going to love it. I love it. You will love it.

It is certainly a delicious dish for a casual Sunday roast with friends.  Instead of cooking in the oven, try the chicken roasted in a kettlebraai.  Smoking this is an added kick of flavour.

For the chicken and marinade

±1.4kg free-range chicken
1 heaped tablespoon each finely grated garlic, fresh ginger and fresh red chilli
1 T tomato purée
1 T each of ground coriander, turmeric, garam masala and ground cumin
2 t natural yoghurt
2 lemons
2 t sea salt

For the gravy

1 stick of cinnamon
3 small red onions, peeled
10 cloves
3 T each of white wine vinegar and Worcestershire sauce
3 T plain flour
1/2 chicken stock cube dissolved in 500ml warm water
2-4T plain yoghurt, to serve

For the Bombay-style potatoes

800g new potatoes
sea salt and ground pepper
1 lemon
±3T  olive oil
a knob of butter
1t each of black mustard seeds, cumin seeds, garam masala and turmeric
1 bulb of garlic
1 fresh red chilli, deseeded and finely sliced
2 tomatoes, roughly chopped
1 small bunch of fresh coriander

  1. Slash the chicken’s legs a few times right down to the bone. Get a roasting tray slightly bigger than the chicken, then add all of the marinade ingredients and mix together well. Put on a pair of clean rubber gloves, then really massage those flavours over and inside the chicken so it’s smeared everywhere. Don’t be shy! Ideally marinate overnight in the fridge.
  2. Preheat the oven to 200°C and organize your shelves so the roasting tray can sit right at the bottom, the chicken can sit directly above it, right on the bars of the shelf, and the potatoes can go at the top.
  3. Halve any larger potatoes, then parboil them in a large pan of salted boiling water with a whole lemon for about 15 to 20 minutes, or until the potatoes are cooked through. Drain the potatoes then let them steam dry.
  4. Stab the lemon a few times with a sharp knife and put it right into the chicken’s cavity. Move the chicken to a plate.
  5. Roughly chop the onions and add to the roasting tray along with the cinnamon stick, cloves, vinegar and Worcestershire sauce, then whisk in the flour. Pour in the stock, then place this right at the bottom of the oven. Place the chicken straight on to the bars of the middle shelf, above the roasting tray. Cook for 1 hour.
  6. Put another sturdy roasting tray over a medium heat and add the olive oil, a knob of butter, the mustard and cumin seeds, garam masala and turmeric – work quickly because if the fat gets too hot the mustard seeds will pop everywhere. Halve the bulb of garlic and add it straight to the pan, with the sliced chilli and chopped tomatoes.
  7. Add your drained potatoes to the tray, mix everything together, then season well.
  8. Finely slice and scatter in the coriander stalks, and keep the leaves in a bowl of water for later. After the chicken has been in for 40 minutes, put the potatoes in.
  9. Once the chicken is cooked, move it to a board and carefully peel off the dark charred bits to reveal perfect chicken underneath. Pass the gravy through a coarse sieve into a pan, whisking any sticky goodness from the pan as you go. Bring to the boil and either cook and thicken or thin down with water to your preference. Put it into a serving bowl and drizzle over a little yoghurt.
  10. Get your potatoes out of the oven and put them into a serving bowl, then serve the chicken on a board next to the sizzling roasties and hot gravy. Sprinkle the reserved coriander leaves over everything and serve with any condiments you like. Life doesn’t get much better.

Serves 4 to 6

Recipe taken from Jamie’s Great Britain by Jamie Oliver ©Jamie Oliver 2011. All rights reserved. Photography © David Loftus 2011

Wickedfood Cooking School runs cooking classes throughout the year at its purpose-built Johannesburg cooking studio. Cookery classes are run in the mornings and evenings 7 days a week (subject to a minimum of 12 people). The venue is also popular for corporate events and private functions – teambuilding cooking classes, birthdays, kitchen teas, and dinner parties with a difference. Our cooking lessons are hands-on, where every person gets to participate in the preparation of the dishes. They are also a lot of fun where you not only learn new skills, but get to meet people with similar interests. For corporate groups and team building cooking classes these events are a novel way of creating staff interaction or entertaining clients.

Chicken breasts with Caper Sauce

Saturday, July 16th, 2011

At Wickedfood Cooking School we teach students how to make this dish in our quick and easy meals cooking class. Lemon lovers will savor the citrus sauce that enhances this moist chicken. The hint of garlic and saltiness of the capers adds to this dishes appeal. Substitute chicken with fish fillets.

4 boneless skinless chicken breasts,

Salt and pepper to taste

2T grapeseed oil

3 garlic cloves, minced

1/2 cup water or fruity off-dry white wine

1/2 chicken stock cube dissolved in 1/2 cup hot water

1 – 2T  lemon juice (to taste)

1t cornstarch dissolved in a little water

1-2t sugar to taste

3T  capers in vinegar, drained

1T  butter

  1. Season the chicken with salt and pepper.
  2. In a large frying pan heat the oil. Add the garlic and cook over medium heat for 1 minute.
  3. Add the seasoned chicken and cook for 5-7 minutes on each side or until just cooked through. Remove and keep warm.
  4. Add the water/wine, chicken stock, lemon juice, cornstarch and sugar to the pan, and bring to boil, scraping the pan to loosen any bits that may have formed when cooking the chicken. Cook  for ±2 minutes or until thickened.
  5. Stir in the capers and butter. Adjust the flavour with salt, lemon juice and sugar. Return chicken to pan; turn to coat. Serve chicken with sauce.

Serves 4.

Wickedfood Cooking School runs cooking classes throughout the year at its purpose-built Johannesburg cooking studio. Cookery classes are run in the mornings and evenings 7 days a week (subject to a minimum of 12 people). The venue is also popular for corporate events and private functions – teambuilding cooking classes, birthdays, kitchen teas, and dinner parties with a difference.

Our cooking lessons are hands-on, where every person gets to participate in the preparation of the dishes. They are also a lot of fun where you not only learn new skills, but get to meet people with similar interests. For corporate groups and team building cooking classes these events are a novel way of creating staff interaction or entertaining clients.

Mustard chicken

Monday, March 7th, 2011

With quick dauphinoise, greens, black forest affogato.

This week’s recipe comes from our cookbook of the week, Jamie’s 30 Minute Meals. It is definitely one of the recipes that Wickedfood Cooking School will use  for an exciting new Jamie Oliver Cooking Class later this year.

© David Loftus

DAUPHINOISE
1 red onion
1kg potatoes
1 nutmeg
2 cloves of garlic
1 x 300ml tub of single cream
4 anchovies in oil
Parmesan cheese
2 bay leaves
a very small bunch of fresh thyme

SEASONINGS
olive oil
extra virgin olive oil
sea salt & black pepper

CHICKEN
a few sprigs of fresh rosemary
4 x 180g chicken breasts, skin on
4 teaspoons Colman’s mustard powder
3 baby leeks or 1 large leek
4 cloves of garlic
white wine
75ml single cream (taken from cream for dauphinoise)
1 heaped teaspoon wholegrain mustard

GREENS
200g Swiss chard or other greens
1 x 200g bag of pre-washed baby spinach
1 lemon

AFFOGATO
1 tablespoon instant coffee (or you could use 4–6 shots of espresso)
3 teaspoons golden caster sugar
4–6 round shortbread biscuits
1 x 425g tin of pitted black cherries in juice
1 x 100g bar of good-quality dark chocolate (70% cocoa solids)
1 x 500g tub of good-quality vanilla ice cream

TO START Get all your ingredients and equipment ready. Put a medium saucepan and a large ovenproof frying pan on a low heat. Fit the thick slicer disc attachment into the food processor and turn the oven on to 220°C. Fill and boil the kettle.

DAUPHINOISE
Peel and halve the red onion. Wash the potatoes, leave their skins on and slice in the food processor with the onion. Tip into a large sturdy roasting tray (approx. 35 x 25cm) and season. Grate over ¼ of the nutmeg, crush in 2 unpeeled cloves of garlic and pour in 225ml of single cream.
Tear in the anchovies and finely grate over a large handful of Parmesan. Add the bay leaves, pick the leaves from a few thyme sprigs and add a good drizzle of olive oil. Use your clean hands to quickly mix and toss everything together, then put the tray over a medium heat. Pour in 200ml of boiled water, cover tightly with tin foil and leave on the heat.

CHICKEN
Turn the heat under the frying pan up to medium. Pick and finely chop the leaves from the rosemary sprigs and sprinkle them into the pack of chicken. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon of mustard powder over each breast, then season and drizzle some olive oil over the chicken and into the frying pan. Massage and rub these flavours all over the meat. Put the chicken breasts in the pan, skin side down. Wash your hands well. Use a fish slice to press down on the chicken to help it cook. It should take around 18 minutes in total.

DAUPHINOISE
Give the tray a shake so nothing catches.

GREENS Finely slice the stalks so they cook quickly. Wash the leaves. Put the stalks into the saucepan, cover with boiling water, add a good pinch of salt and put the lid on.

DAUPHINOISE Remove the tin foil. Finely grate over a layer of Parmesan. Drizzle the remaining thyme sprigs with oil, scatter on top and put into the oven on the top shelf to cook for 15 minutes, or until golden brown and bubbling.

CHICKEN Quickly trim the leeks and halve lengthways. Wash them under the cold tap, then finely slice them and add to one side of the chicken pan.

GREENS
Add the chard leaves to the saucepan. Add another splash of boiled water if needed.

CHICKEN Crush 4 unpeeled cloves of garlic into the pan of chicken. Flip the chicken breasts skin side up, then press down on them again. Stir the leeks and add a good swig of white wine.

GREENS
Empty the bag of spinach into a colander and pour the greens and the boiling water over the spinach. Add a lug of olive oil to the empty saucepan, squeeze in the juice of 1 lemon, then return all the drained greens to the pan and use tongs to toss and dress in the flavours. Season to taste, then take straight to the table.

CHICKEN
Check the chicken is cooked through, then pour 75ml of cream into the frying pan. Cover the pan with tin foil. Quickly check on the dauphinoise.

AFFOGATO Put 1 tablespoon of instant coffee into a small jug with 3 teaspoons of sugar. Half-fill the kettle and boil. Crumble the shortbread biscuits into the bottom of 4 espresso cups. Drain the cherries and divide them between the cups. Bash the bar of chocolate up and add a few chunks
to each cup.Take the cups to the table.

CHICKEN Turn the heat off. Transfer the chicken breasts to a board and slice into uneven pieces. Stir 1 heaped teaspoon of whole grain mustard into the sauce, then taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary. Spoon the sauce on to a platter and put the sliced chicken on top. Drizzle over some extra virgin olive oil and take straight to the table.

DAUPHINOISE
Take to the table. Get your ice cream out of the freezer to soften for later.

TO SERVE
After dinner, stir some boiling water into the jug of coffee and sugar. Take to the table with the ice cream and spoon a scoop into each espresso cup. Grate over some chocolate, then pour over just enough hot coffee (or espresso) to start melting the chocolate. So delicious!

Main courses serves 4 to 6

For other recipes from Jamie’s 30 Minute Meals …. click here.

Wickedfood Cooking School runs cooking classes throughout the year at its purpose-built Johannesburg cooking studio. Cookery classes are run in the mornings and evenings 7 days a week (subject to a minimum of 12 people). The venue is also popular for corporate events and private functions – teambuilding cooking classes, birthdays, kitchen teas, and dinner parties with a difference.

Our cooking lessons are hands-on, where every person gets to participate in the preparation of the dishes. They are also a lot of fun where you not only learn new skills, but get to meet people with similar interests. For corporate groups and team building cooking classes these events are a novel way of creating staff interaction or entertaining clients.

Chicken livers peri peri

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

Q: I am looking for a good Portuguese chicken livers recipe. Thanks

A: Chicken livers are delicious, simply pan-fried with a bit of butter and garlic.  The secret is not to overcook them.  They should still be slightly pink in the middle.  In our Portuguese cooking class at Wickedfood cooking school, our students cook the following dish, with a spicy peri-peri sauce. It makes a delicious starter.

500g chicken livers

2T olive oil

2T butter

1 large onion, finely chopped

2 cloves garlic, crushed

3-6 chillies (according to taste)

1t salt

1/2t cumin

2t paprika

1 bay leaf

1t chicken stock

±2/3 cup white wine

1 loaf crusty Portuguese bread

  1. Trim the livers of any fat, and cut in into ±2cm peices.
  2. Heat the butter and oil in a pan and fry onions, garlic, chillies and spices until the onions are soft.
  3. Add livers and cook until just brown, stirring gently.
  4. Add bay leaf, chicken stock and wine. Simmer over low heat for 5-8 minutes. Serve immediately with crusty bread.

Serves 6

Wickedfood Cooking School runs cooking classes throughout the year at its purpose-built Johannesburg cooking studio. Cookery classes are run in the mornings and evenings 7 days a week (subject to a minimum of 12 people). The venue is also popular for corporate events and private functions – teambuilding cooking classes, birthdays, kitchen teas, and dinner parties with a difference.

Our cooking lessons are hands-on, where every person gets to participate in the preparation of the dishes. They are also a lot of fun where you not only learn new skills, but get to meet people with similar interests. For corporate groups and team building cooking classes these events are a novel way of creating staff interaction or entertaining clients.

Schmaltz

Monday, November 29th, 2010

Schmaltz or schmalz is rendered pork, chicken or goose fat used for frying or as a spread on bread, especially in German, Ashkenazi Jewish and Chinese cuisines.

Schmaltz rendered from a chicken or goose is popular in Jewish cuisine;  it was used by Northwestern and Eastern European Jews who were forbidden by kashrut (Jewish dietary laws) to fry their meats in butter or lard, the common forms of cooking fat in Europe, and who could not obtain the kinds of cooking oils, such as olive oil and sesame oil, that they had used in the Middle East and around the Mediterranean (as in Spain and Italy) – the overfeeding of geese to produce more fat per bird produced post classical Europe’s first foie gras as a side effect.

Schmaltz is great for frying potatoes, sauteing vegetables, making a roux, or flavoring pâtés and savoury mousses.

500g chicken, duck, goose or pork fat – (ask your butcher) finely chopped
250g chicken skin, roughly chopped
1 medium onion, finely chopped
Kosher salt, to taste
  1. Put chicken fat and skin, onions, salt, and 3⁄4 cup water into a pot over medium-low heat. Cook, stirring form time to time, until fat has rendered and skin is crisp, about 1 1⁄2 hours.
  2. Strain, reserving crisp skin to use as a garnish for sautéed greens or chopped liver.
  3. Schmaltz will keep, in a tightly sealed container in the refrigerator, for 2 weeks.

Make about 1 1/2 cups

For more see Jewish inspired recipes see Jewish Delis Around the World

Wickedfood Cooking School runs cooking classes throughout the year at its purpose-built Johannesburg cooking studio. Cookery classes are run in the mornings and evenings 7 days a week (subject to a minimum of 12 people). The venue is also popular for corporate events and private functions – teambuilding cooking classes, birthdays, kitchen teas, and dinner parties with a difference.

Our cooking lessons are hands-on, where every person gets to participate in the preparation of the dishes. They are also a lot of fun where you not only learn new skills, but get to meet people with similar interests. For corporate groups and team building cooking classes these events are a novel way of creating staff interaction or entertaining clients.