Mustard and Rosemary Roasted Chicken (21DSD-friendly!)

January 3, 2013 in Meat and Poultry

What do I love most about roasting whole chicken?  It’s easy, takes very little time to prepare, makes several meal’s worth (I always cook two at a time), the cooked meat freezes really well for future meals, it’s a fairly cheap meat (even free-range and pastured chickens can be found relatively inexpensively), you get to save the bones for bone broth, and it’s delicious!   Is it okay to have seven favorite things?

Where do you buy fully pastured chicken?  Both US Wellness Meats sells it and GrassFed Traditions sells it (both for similar prices).  You can also buy free-range chicken at Trader Joe’s (for only $2.50/lb) and many other grocery stores and specialty food stores (like Whole Foods).

This particular seasoning for roast chicken is amazing—especially if you want to make gravy with the pan juices!  I know that making pan gravy can be daunting for many, but it really isn’t that hard and it’s so worth the effort with this chicken!  It takes a little practice to eyeball how much thickener you need, when it’s as thick as you like it, how to handle clumps—but the great part is that gravy is good stuff even if it’s too thin, too thick, or slightly lumpy.

To make pan gravy, place the roasting pan (without the cooked chickens or rack on top) onto a large element on the stove.  Turn to medium-high heat (or slightly hotter) and bring the juices to a simmer (if it’s more of a boil, turn down the heat a little).  Meanwhile, mix about ¼ cup of arrowroot powder or kuzu starch (my favorite two paleo-friendly starches for making gravy) with about ¼ cup cold water (to dissolve it, this helps with the clumps).  Pour the starchy water into the pan while whisking like crazy with a wire whisk.  Keep whisking until the gravy has thickened (takes 3-4 minutes).  If it’s not thick enough for you (this depends in large part on how much juices you have in your pan), repeat with more arrowroot powder or kuzu starch (if it’s close, just try 2 Tbsp).  If you end up with some starch lumps, simply pour your gravy through a strainer before serving.  If your gravy ends up too thick, thin it out with a little hot water.  Just don’t try to make gravy for the first time at the same time as you are minding other pots on the stovetop.

 

Ingredients:

  1. Preheat oven to 350F.
  2. Remove chickens from packaging, pat dry with paper towels, remove any giblets (save these for making bone broth!) and place on your roasting pan, using the rack insert that comes with the pan.
  3. Melt lard or coconut oil and mix with Dijon and rosemary.  Baste the entire surface of both chickens with the mustard sauce (I just use my hands).
  4. Roast chickens for 20 minutes per pound (or until a meat thermometer reads at least 165F—it’s standard to cook until breast meat reads 180F).
  5. Make pan gravy with the juices if desired.  Carve and serve!

TPV Epidose 14 Show Notes: Practical Paleo 2-Food Prep

November 16, 2012 in Show Notes

Our fourteenth show!
Ep. 14: Practical Paleo Part 2: Food Prep

In this episode, Stacy and Sarah are joined by the fantastic Michelle of Nom Nom Paleo to discuss practical tips on running your paleo kitchen. How do you do quick meals on hectic nights? How do you manage your time so you’re not spending all of it in the kitchen? How do you store food and handle it safely so you don’t get sick? All these topics and more are discussed by three women who are successfully doing it!

 

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The Paleo View (TPV), Episode 14: Practical Paleo Part 2: Food Prep

  • 0:00 – Introduction
  • 1:18 – News and Views
    • Our guest this week is none other than our main lady, Nom Nom Paleo! Check out her iPad app here (our review). You may follow her on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest as well.
    • Stacy, dictionary.com has dethaw! It’s a generally accepted colloquialism!
    • Remember kids, only you can avoid cooking your hand and burning your beard off!
    • It is true that I once broke my clavicle at a softball game and attempted to continue playing.
    • Our Great Wolf Lodge trip was documented here and includes tips on traveling on paleo
  • 9:52 – Science with Sarah: Why should you have a manual defrost freezer?
    • Frozen meat? Like from US Wellness?
    • -20 degrees Celsius is actually -4 degrees Fahrenheit and also 253.15 Kelvin.
    • Here’s a comparison between frost-free and manual freezers. While the hassle of defrosting a freezer is problematic, your food will not dry out like the frost-free and it will be more energy efficient.
    • Ladies, chest freezers are way better! More energy efficient and will last longer in a blackout because the cold air will stay down in the freezer instead of escaping out the door!
  • 16:47 – Questions and answers
    • 17:10 – How do you prepare food for different caloric needs?
    • 26:05 – How do I keep from being in the kitchen all the time?
      • I spend an awful lot of time in the kitchen, but I try really hard to multitask with it. I invite the kids in and we do homework together while I cook or we play board games or talk about our days or even do something for myself.
      • (By the way, being an at home dad is not the hardest job in the world and I can’t imagine the amount of intellectual focus and drove it takes to have Stacy’s job, but it is the hardest job to manage and do successfully)
      • Time management from Sarah
      • And perhaps it would be helpful to check out Once a Month Mom? There are certainly adaptable menus there.
      • Well Fed and our reviews.
    • 35:30 – Tips about freezing food and food safety
    • 52:12 – Is baking powder paleo?
      • Baking powder recipe
      • Chemical formula: 9 Na2CO3 + 2 KC4H5O6 = 5 H2O + 17 CO2 + 18 Na + 2 K. It’s the CO2 that makes it rise
    • 57:36 – How long until the beef fat from stock last?
      • Pure fat will definitely last months, but that fat from the stock will definitely contaminate in a week or two.
    • 1:00:34 – Can you poach fish from frozen?
    • 1:03:33 -How do you eat sardines?
  • 1:11:33 – Paleo Parenting
    • How do you include your kids in your food prep?
  • 1:20:54 -Outro

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