The New Zealand Herald

Roast chicken no frills

For times when you want to go back to basics and make it easy

- Recipe by Ray McVinnie Photograph­y & styling by Tam West

This produces a juicy roast chicken with fragrant stuffing and enough pan juices to use as a thin sauce or thicken lightly with cornflour for a more traditiona­l gravy. The soy sauce is there to darken the pan juices and gives a savoury, umami flavour without dominating. The chicken is cooked when the internal temperatur­e is 75C, or when a small knife inserted into the middle of the stuffing then withdrawn is too hot to touch. When the thigh is pierced to the bone with a small knife the juices should run clear. Serve with rice or roasted or boiled potatoes and one or two simply cooked green vegetables. The chicken should be tender enough to pull apart so, carving isn’t an issue. Serves 6

2 cups fresh breadcrumb­s, or simply good bread ripped into very small pieces (I use the crusts and it’s great if you use a traditiona­l sourdough bread)

3 cloves garlic, finely chopped

1 tsp salt

4 Tbsp plain unsweetene­d, additive-free

yoghurt

3 Tbsp chopped parsley

4 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil

1 Tbsp very finely chopped rosemary or

thyme leaves

Size 16 organic chicken

1 bamboo skewer

1 cup dry white wine 2 Tbsp Japanese soy sauce 1 cup water

Heat the oven to 190C.

Put the breadcrumb­s, garlic, salt, yoghurt, parsley, 2 tablespoon­s of the oil and the rosemary or thyme into a bowl. Add a sprinkle of freshly ground black pepper and mix well. This is the stuffing. Cut the wing tips off the chicken and discard them.

Stuff the stuffing into the chicken’s body cavity. Pin the cavity closed with the skewer.

Place the chicken, breast side down, in an ovenproof dish that will just hold it. Add the wine, water and soy sauce and drizzle the remaining oil over the top. Place in the oven for 45 minutes. Turn over and cook for a further 45 minutes, basting occasional­ly. Remove from the oven, place the chicken on a warm serving platter. Pour the pan juices into a jug to use as is, or thicken lightly by bringing to the boil and stirring in a little cornflour mixed to a thin slurry with cold water. Serve with the chicken.

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