Thursday, September 5, 2019

Winner, winner, chicken dinner!



To finish out the week of meals, I’m going to talk about dinner.  I am a meal-planner.  The advantages of meal-planning, from my perspective, include not having to go to the grocery store as often, saving time, avoiding food waste, and not having to figure out dinner while hungry, which often leads to bad choices.

Most weeks, I roast a chicken.  It takes a little longer than some meals, but then I have the glories of leftovers.  The carcass goes into the stock pot with water, herbs, carrots, celery, and onion to make broth.  That broth and some of the meat can become chicken soup with rice or noodles, or, even better, tortilla soup.  Some of the meat can go in sandwiches or salad or pot pie or pasta.  It’s efficient, tasty, and reasonably healthy.

Here is how I do it:

1 whole chicken
About 2 tablespoons salt
About 2 tablespoons Penzey’s Mural of Flavor (or other dried herbs of choice)

Early in the day or the night before, rinse the chicken and remove giblets (save them for the stock pot!).  Mix the salt and herbs in a small bowl and rub them all over the chicken in a roasting pan.  Put the chicken, uncovered, in the fridge until time to cook.

Preheat oven to 450.  Roast the chicken for 30 minutes.  Turn the heat down to 350 and roast the chicken for about an hour more, until meat thermometer registers 165.  If you have time, let it rest a bit before carving, but nothing bad will happen if you carve immediately.

To make broth:

1 chicken carcass
Chicken giblets
3-4 carrots, roughly chopped
3-4 celery ribs with leaves, roughly chopped
1 onion, roughly chopped
Herbs:  rosemary, thyme, sage, oregano, parsley, etc.

Remove most of meat from chicken carcass and save for other uses.  Put carcass in large stock pot with remaining ingredients.  Cover with water.  Bring to a boil.  Reduce heat, cover, and simmer for at least an hour (longer is better; I tend to start the process before doing the dinner dishes and let it simmer until bedtime.).  Strain the broth, discarding solids, and refrigerate.

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