Ingredients
Method
Instructions for Roast Chicken
- Preheat oven to 180ºC or 200ºC (see aside on cooking times) with the roasting tray already inside the oven
- Remove chicken from fridge
- Remove giblets from body cavity (if any)
- Wash and dry chicken inside and out
- Leave chicken to reach room temperature
- Prepare stuffing of choice
- Mix together ingredients of your basting sauce of choice
- Stuff chicken with stuffing of choice
- Place chicken in roasting tray so the breast is up
- Rub basting sauce of choice all over the chicken
- Cook, basting during cooking, until done (you can tell if the bird is cooked by piercing the inner thigh with a skewer. Pink juices means it needs longer; clear juices means it is cooked.)
- Leave the cooked chicken in a warm place for 5-1 min before carving to allow the meat to 'set'
Instructions for Traditional Herb Stuffing
- Cook onion and celery in a covered pan for 3-5 min (stop before they brown)
- Remove from heat
- Add remaining ingredients to onion mix
- Mix well
Instructions for Lemon Stuffing
- Place in the chicken's cavity
Instructions for Light Chicken Gravy
- Transfer chicken and any vegetables to a serving dish
- Drain off fat, leaving pan drippings and about 1 tablespoon of fat.
- Shift flour over the pan
- Mix and heat until bubbles and browns
- Mix in the stock and sherry
- Simmer for 5 min
- Season
- Strain the gravy through a sieve
- Pour into a serving jug
Notes
You can use Traditional Herb Stuffing but I often replace this with a sliced lemon instead. Or don't stuff at all. If you do add a stuffing then you'll have to cook for longer (see aside on cooking times).
Personally I like the flavour of the lemon and the simplicity of the idea. A good combination with a wine basting sauce.
In New Zealand and the UK Roast Chicken is traditionally served with a thin gravy made from the roasting dripping.
Personally I like the flavour of the lemon and the simplicity of the idea. A good combination with a wine basting sauce.
In New Zealand and the UK Roast Chicken is traditionally served with a thin gravy made from the roasting dripping.