Learn to make delicious roast chicken

30 Comments

  1. This is a well written article with great info and supporting links that should satisfy the biggest cooking geek. I understand and learned a lot. Thank you for the work and the great products. But, I wonder if your real goal is to get me to buy the data logger. Don’t think I can get the wife on board for that as she already thinks I have too many probes to go with the ChefAlarm. 🙂

    1. Tom,

      We used the data loggers so we could graph exactly what was happening during and after cooking to be sure the chicken would really be safe to eat at Kenji’s indicated pull temperature–and it thankfully was! A ChefAlarm is definitely the ideal tool when tracking temperatures in a large piece of meat roasting in the oven. Especially with the high and low alarms, and its min max feature so you know when you’ve reached your pull temperature as well as the highest temp reached during the rest.

      Thanks!
      -Kim

  2. Awesome! I am definitely going to give this a try on our next roasted chicken.

    Can this same procedure be used for roasting turkey?

  3. Thanks for this article. I learned so much: like about the pointlessness of trussing. Plus, how refreshing that we can now enjoy chicken safely without it being dry!

  4. This article is a relief in a lot of ways! I was always concerned about getting the entire chicken to 165 degrees — making multiple temp checks of the bird to be certain. Now, however, I can be safe and prepare a great, juicy chicken. And I’m with Robin — does it work for turkey? Seems like it should.

    1. The safe internal temperature for cooked chicken is 165F with no signs of pink. I hope no one has gotten food poisoning from following these suggestions.






  5. For smaller quantities of chicken (like a few chicken breasts), cooking up via sous vide to a lower target temperature works wonders as well. It’s a completely different meat than what I ate for decades. Juicy, no worries, easy.

    (We usually go about 150°F, then finish quickly on the stove or grill. Usually with a perfunctory temp verification with the Thermapen. Same rules though – do your homework to get proper time/temp calculations.)

    1. psiuuuu,

      I couldn’t agree more! I love the sous vide cooking method. You’re guaranteed juicy meat that will never exceed its max temp.

      Thanks for your comment,
      -Kim

  6. How can this be done on a Kamado, like a Komodo Kamado, Big Green Egg, or any other brand ? Would definitely like to try this.

    1. Gary, just set you temperatures on your Komodo or BGE to the same temp as we used in the oven. Be sure to use your ThermoWorks tools to measure your grill surface temp, and the internal temp of your chicken.

      1. The instructions say to Pre-heat oven to 500. Then once the chicken is put into the oven and the door is closed, lower the temp of the oven to 350.
        Can I just set the vents for just 350 or do I want to pre-heat the KK at 500 ?
        How long at 500 ? Don’t want to heat soak the KK for a long time as it takes a while to get the temp down.

        Thankd.

        1. Gary,

          Just start your KK at hot as you can get it before placing the chicken and bringing the temp down.

          Thanks!
          -Kim

  7. I tried this and somehow I did something wrong as well I would like to know what to do once the chicken hits 145. I understand leaving the chicken rest at 145 at 8 minutes and let the chicken rest for 10 minutes afterwards. The question is once the chicken hits 145, is the chicken taken out ? In the directions it really doesn’t say what to do.

    Thank you.

    Gary

    1. Gary,

      Thank you for your comment, and I’m sorry the instructions weren’t more clear. Yes, you remove the chicken from the oven when you confirm the lowest temperature is at least 145°F.

      Thanks,

      -Kim

  8. I learned so much from this. I never knew that you could spread contaminated water in your kitchen if you rinse your chicken. Thanks for sharing the tips, I’ll definitely have to keep them in mind.

  9. I used this method. When the breast was at the recommended temperature for removing from the oven, the thigh wasn’t ready. Is there really any reliable way around this, for roasting, other than spatchcocking or more drastically, just cutting the chicken apart? I’ve heard of roasting on a pre-heated cast iron pan to give the dark meat a head start; I’ve heard of roasting breast-down; I don’t know if any of that is backed up by data.






    1. Ou could follow our preferred method for turkey: let the chicken sit on the counter for a half-hour or so with a bag of ice laid on the breast. The thighs warm up a little, getting closer to room temp, while the breast stays cold. That thermal difference tracks all the way up through the cook. So if you can establish a 20°F difference at the start by icing the breast, you’ll have that difference at the end, too.

  10. This has become my go-to chicken recipe. The skin comes out perfectly crispy and the flavor is perfect! Thank you for teaching me so much in this recipe.






  11. Would you consider icing the breast on this also if smoking at a lower temp for awhile and then raising the temp towards the end. Similar to your turkey idea of icing them for two hours before throwing on the smoker.

  12. One of the influential factors to the carry-over resting curves is the oven temperature (350°). Using a BBQ smoker running at 300° or 250° will most assuredly exhibit a different gradient. And because that gradient is what’s important for food safety, people need to respect the “math”😄 Glad you pointed out how individual chicken pieces will also gradient differently compared to whole birds due to their mass/total heat energy absorbed.

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