Best Chicory Roasted With Thyme Bacon Recipes

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ROAST RED CHICORY



Roast Red Chicory image

If you're of the bitter-is-better school of eating - which I emphatically am - then this is for you. I think there isn't a week that goes past when I don't cook this, and I often make it just to let it get cold and eat it as a salad whenever I feel the urge. But even if you are hesitant about bitterness, this may still be for you: the oven mellows the rasping bite of the raw chicory and, for reasons I don't quite understand, the dry white vermouth makes it sweeten as it cooks. If you don't want to use the vermouth, replace with 45ml / 3 tablespoons freshly squeezed orange juice mixed with the same amount of water. I know the thyme is just for sprinkling on top, but I don't regard it as optional; its flavour is essential to this dish, for me. If you can't get red chicory, of course you can use regular white chicory. It can have slightly more bitterness (not a bad thing in my book) and is rather less appealing to the eye, but the recipe works in exactly the same way. For US cup measures, use the toggle at the top of the ingredients list.

Provided by Nigella

Yield Serves: 3-4

Number Of Ingredients 5

500 grams red chicory (4-5 heads) quartered lengthways
1 teaspoon sea salt flakes
4 x 15ml tablespoons (60ml) regular olive oil
6 x 15ml tablespoons (90ml) dry white vermouth
thyme (a few sprigs)

Steps:

  • Preheat the oven to 200°C/180°C Fan/400°F. Arrange the quartered red chicory spears, cut-side up, in a shallow roasting tin in which they sit snugly. Sprinkle with sea salt flakes and pour over the olive oil and vermouth. Turn the spears in the pan then sit them cut-side up again before putting into the oven to roast for 30 minutes until the leaves are slightly charred and wilted and the cores soft. Take out of the oven and let the darkened, softened red chicory sit in the tin for 10 minutes before transferring to a plate, making sure you pour every bit of juice over. If there are any sticky caramelised bits in the pan, de-glaze with a spoonful of boiling water and pour over, too. Strew with thyme and serve.

ROAST CHICKEN WITH THYME, GARLIC AND BACON



Roast Chicken With Thyme, Garlic and Bacon image

This recipe is made with dried, ground thyme, and garlic powder. Pancetta, or sliced bacon can both be used.

Provided by Tuck Burnette

Categories     Chicken

Time 2h30m

Yield 4-6 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 10

1 (5 -6 lb) chicken
1 1/2 tablespoons dried ground thyme
2 teaspoons garlic powder
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon pepper
1 lemon, zest and juice of (optional)
2 -3 tablespoons olive oil
3 -4 ounces thick bacon, sliced or 3 -4 ounces diced pancetta
2 cups low sodium chicken broth
cornstarch

Steps:

  • Wash the chicken well, removing any excess fat pockets, and trimming the skin lightly if desired. Loosen the skin from the breast and leg meat carefully. Take out any innards trapped in the bones of the cavity and let fresh water clear it out. Dry the chicken well, all of you.
  • Combine the thyme, garlic, salt, pepper, and olive oil in a bowl. Stir well, adding the lemon zest, and strained juice, if desired.
  • Slather some of the mixture into the cavity of the chicken. Put in the chopped bacon.
  • Massage the remainder, as deeply as possible, into the breast and leg meat, reaching deep into the drumstick, and around the thighs.
  • Tie the chicken legs. If any of the skin tears along the seam of the breast, tape it back together with toothpicks.
  • Fit a roasting pan with a rack and add broth to a level that will not touch the chicken.
  • Lay in the hen, breast side down and roast at 350 for 40-50 minutes.
  • Retrieve the chicken from the oven, turn, breast side up. Continue roasting at 350 until done, and the breast registers 165 degrees in the thickest part. Make sure to take its temperature periodically, I find that people have other things to do and let the chicken cook lazily, thinking that it is never going to be done, and then go to check it, to find that it has already ruined. Check it, at least twice.
  • Transfer to a plate, cover loosely with foil, and discard the rack. Transfer the drippings to a measuring cup. Retrieve off most of the fat, you can save some out to add back to the pan, if you feel the desire to have it a little richer, I don't really like a fat gravy.
  • Taste the drippings, add more broth if desired.
  • Do not have it too salty. Mix some cornstarch into a bowl with a little water or room temperature stock (about 2 tablespoons starch).
  • Bring the drippings to a simmer in a small saucepan. Let the pan be slightly below the boil, and add in the starch, by degrees until it is thick and proper.
  • Cook, if needed, then serve with the roast, carved up at table.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 1406.3, Fat 102.6, SaturatedFat 28.8, Cholesterol 439.7, Sodium 1774.8, Carbohydrate 4.1, Fiber 0.9, Sugar 0.2, Protein 110.8

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