There’s not one way to roast a chicken
From buying to seasoning to cooking, chefs seek the perfect bird
Considering that people have been eating chickens for 8,000 years or more, you’d think that by now we’d have come to some agreement on the best way to cook them. But, even if you only look at classic roasted chicken, chefs take a variety of different approaches.
The rotisserie
“Turning something over a spit is nothing new,” said Georgette Farkas, owner of Rotisserie Georgette in New York City. “This is the most traditional dish on the planet.”
The four-year-old restaurant offers beef, fish, lamb and pork cooked on spits, too, but about 65 percent of its customers order chicken, Farkas said. She charges $72 for a large “poule de luxe” bird, which comfortably serves two or three people, or $27 for half of a slightly smaller bird. They have wild mushroom stuffing between the breast and skin and slices of seared foie gras on top. She also offers a lunchtime “happy meal” of half a roasted chicken with a mixed green salad and fries for $29.
Rotisserie Georgette
Farkas purchases air-dried chickens which are then rubbed with compound butter containing salt and herbes de Provence and left to further air-chill for two more days before being roasted on a hot rotisserie — in excess of 600 degrees Fahrenheit, for 35 to 45 minutes.
At Brider, a fast-casual chicken rotisserie restaurant in Denver, chef Steven Redzikowski takes a different approach.
He also brines the chicken beforehand for 20 minutes in a salty but simple solution of one gallon of cold water to one cup of Kosher salt.
“Sometimes people overthink it, and it doesn’t really taste like chicken anymore,” he said.
The brined chicken is rubbed with a mixture of garlic, rosemary, thyme, a neutral tasting oil and more salt, and is slowly turned in the rotisserie over the course of two hours at 250-300 degrees.
“You could put your hand in front of it for a good 10 seconds before it really starts to burn you,” he said.
Brider
“Cooking at a high temperature, you get the skin super, super crispy upon order,” he said, but slow-roasting keeps them juicy. He and his team start cooking the chickens two hours before service. Then they let them sit for 10 to 12 minutes before cuting them into pieces. Then they quickly reheat them in the oven to crisp up the skin.
Half a chicken at Brider is $18
Oven Roasting
Redzikowski takes a different approach at Oak at Fourteenth, a full-service restaurant with a wood-fired oven in Boulder, Colo.
Roasting half chickens, he bones them and brines them for just 10 minutes and rubs them with a smoother paste then at Brider — chunks of garlic are fine on the rotisserie but less desirable in the oven.
He sears the chicken skin-side down in a hot, oiled cast-iron pan and then finishes it in the 650-700-degree oven until it’s around 85 percent cooked “and the skin is super-duper crispy.” Then he flips it and finishes it. He then removes the chicken and deglazes the pan with thyme, chicken stock and a squeeze of lemon at the end for a jus that he serves with the half chicken, left, for $26.
Laurence Edelman, executive chef of Left Bank in New York City, doesn’t flip the bird at all, cooking it entirely skin-side down.