Thursday, January 31, 2013

That Roasted Chicken

I posted this completely self gratuitous picture of dinner last night on Facebook.  
And apparently it made your mouths water too.  Not only did it look delicious, it was!  And, it was quite easy and fast.  So here's the recipe.  It's my adaptation of Susan Spicer's Roasted Chicken with Olives, Lemon and Garlic (page 251 of her Crescent City Cooking book).  Her recipe calls for using a whole chicken and does not include potatoes or carrots which I added to make this more of a one-pot meal.

Chicken parts on the bone (whatever you like - I used breasts and thighs)
2 Lemons - zested and quartered
8-12 garlic cloves - smashed and peeled
Olive Oil
Salt and Pepper
Crushed Red Pepper Flakes
Fresh Rosemary (about a tablespoon chopped - rest can stay on stem)
Carrots - peeled and cut
Potatoes - whatever kind you like, cut into halves/quarters/etc depending on the size of your potato
1 Onion - peeled and cut into large wedges
1 cup pitted Kalamata olives

Heat oven to 450.

Arrange chicken in roasting pan.  Squeeze 2 of the lemon quarters over the chicken and rub into each piece.  Take a few garlic cloves and slide under skin of chicken.  Let sit for a few minutes.  Pat dry then rub chicken with olive oil.  Season with salt (be generous), pepper, red pepper flakes and some chopped rosemary.  Throw 2-3 lemon quarters, rosemary sprigs and about half of the remaining garlic into the pan.  

Separately, toss the carrots and potatoes with olive oil, salt and pepper.  Then add that to the pan all around the chicken as well.

Put roasting pan in oven for 20-30 minutes.  Remove, turn heat down to 350 and add onions, olives, lemon zest, remaining garlic and lemon quarters.  Put chicken back in oven for 15-20 minutes.
**Spicer's recipe, says to turn chicken to let it cook underneath and then turn again - and only to turn oven down to 400.  Although I reduced the cooking time for cut chicken vs. a whole chicken, mine was still a tad overcooked... and lost some of the lovely crispy-skinness... so I'm telling you NOT to turn it over and reduce oven temp even lower.  The original 450 temp for 30 minutes should give the lovely golden color we desire.

Remove pan from oven, remove chicken, carrots and potatoes to let rest and put pan over high heat on stove to reduce sauce.  The sauce is quite lemon-y but delish... if you want to tone it down, add a little chicken stock.  Let it reduce by about half and you have a wonderful sauce to spoon over your chicken!

ENJOY!


Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Down in the Bayou!

Oh my - I am so far behind!  The past month seems to have flown by.  Seems we were awfully busy - doing absolutely nothing.  And it was marvelous!  

OK, not just nothing.  We shared meals with friends, flew to NC for a wonderful Christmas (and that trip to the ER), actually went out on New Years and all that goes with the holidays - but in between, we just hung out as a family.  And it was peaceful and amazing!  

It has been tough this week to get back into the swing of things.  Especially with the oh so ugly weather outside.  I have decided I am a fair-weathered, winter person.  Yep.  All fall I long for the cooler temps that signify the holidays.  Then sometime just after the New Year when we've had a good week or two of sweater and boot weather - the cold rain begins.  And I'm ready for spring.

So, while it's cold and nasty outside, I am attempting to catch up on this blog.  It's a daunting task... made even worse when I peruse through pictures and realize just how much I have to do!

Let's go back to December.  We took a trip back to Mandeville, LA for a fun weekend with our dear friends.  You may remember our trip there last year.  It's sort of an annual thing.

The kids love it there.  They have a few cats, a new puppy dog, chickens, lots of land to roam around on - plus their own adoring children who love ours like siblings.




Hanson and Sydney have had a sweet, special connection since her birth.




The Whoopie Cushion.  HOURS of entertainment.


One day we visited a wildlife preserve nearby.  Fletcher took a special interest in this cute girl - happy to show her the enormous catfish in the pond.
One serious sack of food!
Seriously, the Global Wildlife preserve is amazing.  If ever in southeast Louisiana, it's a must.  We loaded up on the wagons and headed out to feed the animals.  


Apparently it was near the end of mating season and the boys were getting a bit territorial in the fields.  Made for some truly spectacular moments.




The only rule - DON'T feed the zebras!
I'm sorry, what did you say???

Nice teeth!

Santa made an appearance, on the lookout for Reindeer for his sleigh!




Lauren's face says it all.  These beasts were nasty!

Sally, the camel, was a bit shy.  Syd was intent on getting a closer look.  She must have called "Heeeeere Sally" four hundred times!

Just a little closer now!  Heeeeere Sally!

SUCCESS!

They were NOT as happy to find Santa waiting for them at the finish.

Back at our friends home... did I mention they also have a pool?  And Fletcher is part labrador?


You know where this is going.  Mind you, this was December.  Not exactly pool party temperatures!

Yep - he finally fell/dove all the way in.