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Prep time
5 minutes
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Cook time
1 hour 45 minutes
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Serves
4
Author Notes
This recipe features a one-pot technique for the most tender roast chicken you can imagine, with the most strangely appealing sauce. The lactic acid in milk makes the meat especially tender and turns into an amazingly flavorful sauce that you won't be able to get enough of.
Some of you will want the sauce to be smooth and refined. You can blend it, but frankly, scraping it all up to do so is a chore. Or, according to Cook's Illustrated, you can add a few tablespoons of fat to keep the sauce from curdling: "The fat molecules ... surround the casein clusters, preventing them from bonding," they say. But the added fat is unnecessary, plus the curds are the best part, and the split sauce is actually the point. But feel free to do whatever makes you happy to make the sauce's consistency appealing to you. Adapted slightly from Happy Days with the Naked Chef (Hachette Books, 2002). —Genius Recipes
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Ingredients
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1
(3-pound; 1½-kilogram) organic chicken
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1 pinch
kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
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4 ounces
(1 stick; 115 grams) unsalted butter or olive oil
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1 pint
(565 milliliters) whole milk
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2
lemons, zest peeled in thick strips with a peeler
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10
garlic cloves, unpeeled
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1
good handful fresh sage, leaves picked
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1/2
(3-inch) cinnamon stick
Directions
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Heat the oven to 375°F and find a snug-fitting pot for the chicken. Season the chicken generously all over with salt and pepper.
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In the pot over medium-high heat, melt the butter. Fry the chicken, turning to get an even color all over, until golden. Remove from the heat, transfer the chicken to a plate, and throw away the butter left in the pot (or save for another use). This will leave you with tasty sticky goodness at the bottom of the pan, which will give you a lovely caramel flavor later on.
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Return the chicken to the pot along with the milk, lemon zest, garlic, sage, and cinnamon. Roast, basting with the juices when you can remember, for 1½ hours. (Oliver leaves the pot uncovered, but you can leave it partially covered if you'd like it to retain more moisture.) The lemon zest will sort of split the milk, making a sauce, which is absolutely fantastic.
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Pull the meat off the bones and divide among plates. Spoon over plenty of the juices and the little curds.
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