RECIPE: Rec: Roasted Split Chicken with Mustard Crust. I just watched Jacques P

RECIPE:

florisandy

Well-known member
and it looks so yummy and easy to make. I like how he cuts into the four joints of the spatchcocked chicken in order for it to cook quicker.

See the video at link. It starts with a salmon pizza, the chicken, and the fluffy mashed taters.

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Roasted Split Chicken with Mustard Crust

Watch Episode 204 | Printer-friendly recipe (pdf)

I often make this recipe at home when I am in a hurry, because splitting and flattening the chicken and cutting between the joints of the leg and the shoulder reduce the cooking time by half. I use kitchen shears to split the chicken open at the back and to cut the cooked bird into serving pieces and a knife to cut between the joints.

The mustard crust can be made ahead and even spread on the chicken a day ahead, if you like. I pour the cooked chicken juices into a fat separator with a spout and serve over Fluffy Mashed Potatoes, leaving the fat behind.

4 servings

Mustard Crust

•2 tablespoons chopped garlic

•2 tablespoons Dijon mustard

•2 tablespoons dry white wine

•1 tablespoon soy sauce

•2 tablespoons olive oil

•1 teaspoon Tabasco hot pepper sauce

•1 teaspoon herbes de Provence

•1/2 teaspoon salt

•1 chicken (about 3 1/2 pounds)

•Fluffy Mashed Potatoes

For the crust: Mix all the ingredients in a small bowl.

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. Using kitchen shears or a sharp knife, cut alongside the backbone of the chicken to split it open. Spread and press on the chicken with your hands to flatten it. Using a sharp paring knife, cut halfway through both sides of the joints connecting the thighs and drumsticks and cut through the joints of the shoulder under the wings as well. (This will help the heat penetrate these joints and accelerate the cooking process.)

Put the chicken skin side down on a cutting board and spread it with about half the mustard mixture. Place the chicken flat in a large skillet, mustard side down. Spread the remaining mustard on the skin side of the chicken. Cook over high heat for about 5 minutes, then place the skillet in the oven and cook the chicken for about 30 minutes. It should be well browned and dark on top.

Let the chicken rest in the skillet at room temperature for a few minutes, then cut it into 8 pieces with clean kitchen shears. Defat the cooking juices. If you like, mound some Fluffy Mashed Potatoes on each of four warm dinner plates and place 2 pieces of chicken on each plate. Pour some juice on the mashed potatoes and chicken and serve.

Jacques Pépin

More fast food my way

http://www.kqed.org/w/morefastfoodmyway/episode204.html

 
Love this recipe!

I saw him make it a long time ago, don't remember if it was this show, or with Julia... delicious!

 
This looks great. Some corrections: On the video, it's roasted at 425 F, not 450 as in the listed

instructions. Also, Jacques uses 1 Tbsp herbes de Provence in the video, not 1 tsp as listed. And.... he says to use at least a 4 lb chicken, not 3 1/2 lbs as listed on the site.

Thanks for the link, Sandy!

 
Dam*, you're good! I didn't compare. Thanks Super Meryl! - LOL Anyone care

to correct this guffaw? My head hurts...

 
I used the recipe you posted, popped it in the oven at 450, came

back to the computer and noticed the posts with Meryl's corrections including the oven temp differential, so after 10 minutes in the oven at 450 I turned the oven down to 425. I think it would've been okay to leave it at 450, you'd just have to keep an eye on the chicken toward the end because ovens really do vary so you may find your chicken is done sooner than stated, or may take a lil longer...pretty much as with just about any recipe when roasting or baking....just keep an eye on it and test early for desired doneness.

Also, I found that my mustard sauce consistency was quite a bit runnier than his video version, but then he didn't really measure, just eyeballed it, and I kinda thought there was more than 2 tbsp dijon mustard in his measuring cup. So my mustard sauce tended to run off the chicken into the skillet, but no biggie, it still tasted great in the end. But seriously, it's an easy recipe to play with....you can just eyeball the ingredients as he did, then taste and see if it needs more of something, or go with the measurements and see how you like that version. What I may do next time is either bump up the dijon a little to achieve a less runny consistency so the sauce will stay on the chicken better, OR more probably will just cut down on one of the liquids like maybe the wine, maybe to 1 tbsp (which is what I thought he poured into the cup instead of 2 tbsp) and then taste and see how it is with that amount.

I don't think you can go wrong, it's a tasty recipe and revealed a nice moist chicken for us.

 
Have turkey on the brain this week and was just thinking this mustard sauce treatment might be

really really nice on a half turkey breast with bone. Definitely gonna try that!

 
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