We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Missions is about the worship of Jesus. The goal of missions is the global worship of Jesus by His redeemed people from every tribe, tongue, and nation. The outcome of missions is all peoples delighting to praise Jesus. And the motivation for missions is the enjoyment that His people have in Him. Missions aims at, brings about, and is fueled by the worship of Jesus.
David Mathis

Butterflied Chicken

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats Chicken, Family & fr 8 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 Chicken; Whole, broiler/fryer
3 tb Melted Butter
1 1/2 ts Olive Oil
Salt
Pepper
1/3 c Dijon Mustard
3 tb Scallion; minced
1/2 ts Tarragon
5 dr Hot Pepper Sauce
1 1/2 c Fresh Bread Crumbs

INSTRUCTIONS

Butterflied chicken. To butterfly a chicken. Choose a 3-1/2 lb.
broiler/fryer chicken. With a heavy knife or sturdy shears, cut down close
to the backbone from neck to tail on each side to remove it. Spread the
chicken skin-side up on your work surface and bang the breast with your
fist to break the collar bones and some of the ribs; this flattens the
chicken. Fold the wings akimbo behind the shoulders, and then make a slit
in the skin at either side of the breast tip. Push the knee of the
drumstick firmly up under the armpit to loosen the joint, then insert the
tip of the drumstick through the skin slit. Repeat on the other side.
Broiling: brush butterflied chicken all over with a combination of butter
and olive oil. Arrange the chicken skin-side down (flesh-side up!) in a
broiling pan (not on a rack) and set them so the surface of meat is about
5" from the hot broiler element. After 5 minutes, brush the flesh, which
should just be starting to brown, with butter and oil. Baste again in 5
minutes - use juices in the pan as butter mixture is used up. Sprinkle
lightly with salt and pepper and turn the chicken skin-side up. Broil and
baste 10 minutes more.
NOTE: For a plain broil with no mustard and crumbs, give 15 rather than 10
minutes to a side, until juices run clear yellow from pricked drumsticks.
Mustard and herb coating. Drain fat and juices out of pan into a small
bowl; skim off and discard all but about 4 tablespoons of fat from top of
juices.
Blend mustard in another bowl with scallions or shallots, tarragon and hot
pepper sauce.
Beat up reserved fat and juices and blend half of them into the mustard.
Spread the mustard over the chicken, then pat on a coating of fresh white
breadcrumbs. (Cut crusts off homemade-type fresh nonsweet bread; crumb in a
blender or a processor.) Baste crumbs with remaining fat and juices.
Final cooking. Roast in the upper third of a 400-degree oven for 10 to 12
minutes (20 minutes if cooking is delayed). Crumbs should brown lightly.
Chicken is done when drumsticks are tender when pressed.
Carve into serving pieces at the table, or arrange them on a hot platter in
the kitchen.
BARBECUE NOTE: The crumb coating makes for difficult barbecuing, since the
crumbs tend to burn and fall off into the fire. However, you can use just
the mustard and herb mixture, basted on during the last few minutes of
cooking (beat a few tablespoons of oil into the mustard to take place of
chicken fat and juices).
Recipe by: Julia Child, Possum Kingdom Lake Cookbook
Posted to MC-Recipe Digest by Barb at PK  <abprice@wf.net> on Apr 21, 1998

A Message from our Provider:

“Mad at God? Sure you’ve got the right person?”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?