I’ve tweeted about this recipe often enough and am posting it now at the request of a young acquaintance named Charlie Olvera, so that he might enjoy this dinner on a cold Long Island winter’s night. This is true comfort food — the chicken poaches in a small amount of liquid that forms the basis of a sauce. It’s like chicken soup, but better. It’s a meal in a pot, although I am rounding out our dinner with a tossed green salad and a crusty baguette.
You’ll need a Dutch oven for this. I’m using my beautiful (and inexpensive!) enameled cast iron one, but any deep covered pot will do. Your pot needs to be big enough to comfortably hold a 4 or 5 lb. chicken, and it needs a cover, and it needs to be oven-safe.
Ingredients:
- One 4- to 5-lb. chicken, washed and patted dry
- 1 medium onion, peeled and halved lengthwise
- 4 medium carrots, peeled and cut roughly into one-inch pieces
- 2 stalks of celery, cut in half
- 5 or 6 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped
- 1 lb. baby potatoes, white or red (about 1 inch in diameter; if they’re bigger, cut them accordingly)
- 1 cup of chicken stock
- 1 cup of white wine
- Olive oil
- Salt and pepper
- Bay leaf
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Heat about 1 tbsp. of oil in the Dutch oven over medium-high heat until shimmering. Pat the chicken dry and season it liberally with salt and pepper; tie the legs together with kitchen twine, and tuck the wings behind the back. When the oil is ready, put the chicken in the pot on its breast and let it brown for about 5 or 6 minutes. When it’s nicely browned, turn it over on its back and brown that side as well. When both sides are browned, remove the chicken to a platter, and add another tablespoon of oil to the pot.
Add the onion, celery, and carrots to the pot and cook, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables begin to brown and form a nice fond on the bottom of the pan, about 5 or 6 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add the stock and wine and bay leaf and bring to a boil, scraping the bottom of the pot with a wooden spoon to incorporate the fond. Add the chicken back to the pot on top of the vegetables, breast side up, season the potatoes with salt and pepper and add them to the pot around the chicken, and cover the pot. Put the pot in the oven for at least an hour. You’ll want to cook the chicken until the thigh temperature registers 170 - 175 degrees (this takes roughly an hour to 70 minutes, and it’s extremely forgiving, i.e. this is hard to overcook). When it’s done, take the pot out of the oven, remove the chicken to a serving platter, and tent it while you fix the sauce.
Remove the potatoes and carrots to the serving platter with the chicken. Take the onions, bay leaf, and celery out of the pot and discard. Boil the remaining liquid a little until it thickens slightly, and serve with the chicken, carrots and potatoes. If you’d like a slightly richer sauce, you can whisk a couple of tablespoons of unsalted butter into the sauce off the heat.
You can serve this with whatever starch tickles your fancy, but I really love a good baguette with this. Any simple green vegetable makes a nice accompaniment. Or if you’re lazy, just eat the chicken and veggies and call it a day.
Christmas breakfast at our house has, for the past several years, consisted of freshly made cream scones with clotted cream, lemon curd, and jam. There’s always a big pot of coffee and some tea for Jim. We see no reason to stray from this path.
Last year, after reading a ringing endorsement of this pan on Cook’s Illustrated, I ventured to Wal-Mart and bought one of these 6.5 quart Tramontina enameled cast iron Dutch ovens. My winters are full of soups, stews, and other things that call for slow cooking, sometimes on top of the stove, sometimes in the oven, and I wanted a pot that would serve me well. The truly amazing thing is how well this Dutch oven performs, and how (relatively) inexpensive it was — this year, Wal-Mart’s website lists it at $45 (still a bargain), but I think I might have paid $40 for mine.