Roast Chicken in a Butter Crust

- Total Time
- 1 hour, plus 3 hours' cooking and cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3cups/360 grams all-purpose flour, more as needed
- 1½teaspoons kosher salt
- ½teaspoon sugar
- 6ounces/170 grams cold unsalted butter (1½ sticks), cut into large dice
- 1whole chicken, about 3½ pounds, giblets removed
- Kosher salt and ground black pepper
- 2tablespoons olive oil or butter
- 2large celery stalks, cut into small dice
- 1large carrot, peeled and cut into small dice
- 1onion or 2 shallots, peeled and chopped
- 1tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary, thyme or a combination
- 1egg white
For the Crust
For the Chicken
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the crust: In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine flour, salt and sugar and mix briefly to combine. Add butter pieces and mix until butter breaks into smaller pieces and is evenly mixed with flour. Add ½ cup cold water and mix until dough begins to come together in one lump.
- Step 2
Turn off mixer, remove paddle and attach dough hook. Knead at low speed until a smooth mass forms, about 2 minutes. Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead by hand: push dough away from you with the heel of your hand, fold it over toward you, give it a quarter-turn, then repeat until dough feels elastic and moist. If dough feels sticky, knead in flour as you go, 1 tablespoon at a time. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate at least 30 minutes or up to 2 days.
- Step 3
Make the chicken: Cut off wing tips and discard (or save for stock). Pat bird dry and sprinkle inside and out with salt and pepper. Refrigerate, loosely covered, while you make the stuffing (or longer, up to 2 days).
- Step 4
Heat oil or butter in a medium skillet over medium heat. Add vegetables, herbs and a pinch of salt and cook, stirring, at a gentle sizzle until vegetables are tender, about 8 minutes. Reduce heat as necessary to prevent browning. Set aside to cool.
- Step 5
Heat oven to 400 degrees.
- Step 6
Stuff chicken with the vegetables. To secure stuffing and keep the bird in a compact shape, cross legs at the “ankles” and tie together with twine.
- Step 7
On a lightly floured surface, roll dough out into a rough circle that's large enough to enclose the chicken. Place stuffed chicken, breast side down, in the center. Wrap dough up and around the bird, encompassing it completely. Overlap the edges and pinch them closed to make a seam. Turn wrapped bird over and place seam side down on a baking sheet.
- Step 8
Whisk egg white with 1 tablespoon water and brush all over dough. Sprinkle very lightly with salt. Bake until crust is golden brown and meat is cooked through (165 degrees; it is O.K. to puncture the crust with the thermometer), 1 to 1½ hours depending on size.
- Step 9
Let cool 1 to 2 hours before serving. The meat will remain hot and the juices will be absorbed into the meat and the stuffing.
- Step 10
To serve, use your hands to break off the top of the crust and place on the baking sheet. The breasts will be on top: peel off skin, discard, and carve the breast meat off the bone. Continue carving, without turning bird over. The juices will soak into the crust and pool on the baking sheet: this is exactly what you want. Cut the twine and use a spoon to remove stuffing and divide on serving plates. Add chicken and pieces of crust to each plate. Tilt pan and spoon up juices to pour over meat and vegetables. Serve immediately.
Private Notes
Comments
I have to say that the idea of peeling soggy chicken skin off does not at all seem likely to make a good presentation, and if all done away from the table then what is the point of the luxurious crust? An extremely odd recipe, to say the very least.
I skinned the chicken (anticipating the problem of peeling an essentially steamed skin off the crust) before covering with the pastry but otherwise followed the recipe and it was delicious. My entire family enjoyed the dish.
I have cooked a whole lot of chicken in my day and this recipe by far, is the tastiest ever! The vegetable stuffing permeates every bit of the chicken and it is very easy to accomplish although the recipe looks daunting, it is quick to assemble. The crust is brittle but buttery and absorbs the juices nicely. I intend to make this for a ladies' luncheon because it can be cooked in advance. Thank you for this wonderful and fun recipe.
Try this but use Chicken Breast or Thigh and place bread over like a Wellington! Bomb
More about the sizzle than the steak. Cooked to 165 and rested 1 hr the chicken was thoroughly overdone. Very bland preparation and hardly enough stuffing can fit in a chicken. Like a deconstructed pot pie. If I made it again I’d triple the stuffing, save 2/3 on the side, and make a white flour gravy to top off the finished servings. Which is to say, I’ll be making pot pie instead.
I made this two days in a row. I have to say it is an outstanding recipe and delivers what it promises. I added a bit of garlic to the vegetables the second time around and it was a definite improvement.