Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Don't Ask Why Rotisserie Chicken Thighs

Bake these and you'll have individual portions of rotisserie chicken!

We buy the thighs in bulk from Costco, but thighs are one of the more inexpensive parts of the chicken at any grocery store. So, if you are looking to wow on a budget, look for medium to large sized thighs, bone-in. There is so much more flavor and moistness in a chicken thigh. Once you try thigh, you'll never ask why!!

*Preheat oven to 325.

Needed:

Chicken thighs (as many as you want; we suggest at least 2 per person)
One pat of unsalted butter for each thigh
salt
paprika
a mild dried herb, such as marjoram, parsley or basil


Rinse and pat dry the thighs. Spray a large, high-edged baking pan. Liberally salt both sides of each thigh. Loosen the skin on top of each thigh by sliding your finger underneath the membrane, and placing a pat of unsalted butter, centered up under there. Sprinkle paprika and your herbs on top.

Cook, uncovered, for one and a half hours.

This will make the skin get crispy and the bottoms of the thighs will remain moist, because they are sitting directly in the pan. (Do not use a rack inside your pan!)
If you have a meat thermometer it should quickly read over 160 when you test them at this point. You won't have any pink showing--you want them to be almost over-cooked and easily coming off the bone.

*We used a self-correcting convection oven set to 325 and baked for one hour and twenty minutes. If your convection oven does not self-correct, set it to 300 degrees.
If you are using a conventional (plain 'ole regular oven), bake for at least one and a half hours. Keep an eye on them, of course.

2 comments: