Herbed Roasted Chicken and Vegetables
- 1 whole Small Butternut Squash, Peeled And Cut Into Bite-sized Cubes
- 2 pounds Small, New Red Potatoes, Cleaned And Cut Into Either Halves Or Quarters, Depending On The Size Of The Potato
- 2 whole Medium Sized Sweet Onions, Cut Into Quarters Or Eighths
- 2 cloves To 3 Cloves Fresh Garlic, Peeled And Chunky Diced
- 1 pound To 2 Pounds Whole Mushrooms Such As Crimini, Cleaned With End Of Stems Trimmed
- 1/4 cups Olive Oil, Or As Needed
- 1 teaspoon To 2 Teaspoons Salt, Or As Needed
- 1/2 teaspoons To 1 Teaspoon Ground Black Pepper, Or To Taste
- 1/4 cups Chopped Fresh Parsley
- 5 sprigs Or More Fresh Thyme, Leaves Stripped And Chopped
- 1 Tablespoon Fresh Rosemary (more Or Less To Taste), Finely Chopped
- 1 whole Chicken, Rinsed And Trussed
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
- Prepare butternut squash (see note below), red potatoes, onions and garlic as instructed and put in a large mixing bowl along with the mushrooms.
- Drizzle the vegetables and mushrooms generously with olive oil.
- Toss until well coated.
- Sprinkle the vegetables and mushrooms with salt and pepper to taste; then sprinkle with about half of the parsley, thyme, and rosemary.
- Reserve the remainder of the herbs for the chicken.
- Set aside.
- Rinse the chicken under cool water.
- Pat dry with a paper towel.
- Place the chicken in a large baking dish.
- Rub the entire chicken well with olive oil.
- Season with salt and pepper on all sides and be sure to sprinkle a little salt and pepper into the chicken cavity.
- Sprinkle chicken with the remaining fresh herbs.
- If you dont have enough herbs, well then simply chop some more.
- Center chicken in the baking dish.
- Surround the chicken with the vegetables and mushrooms.
- Any mushrooms that are exposed will most likely get too dry during the cooking process, so put them under the vegetables.
- Bake for 1-1 1/2 hours until the internal temperature of the chicken reaches 165 degrees F on a food thermometer.
- To measure this temperature accurately, place the thermometer in the thickest part of the meat and not resting against bone, or in fat or gristle.
- I put the thermometer in the thickest part of the breast, however testing the thigh is probably the more accurate or best place to test for doneness.
- If you do not have a thermometer, test the doneness of your chicken by piercing the chicken with a slender knife or a skewer.
- The juices will run clear (no pink allowed) when the chicken is done.
- Note:
- To peel and prepare the butternut squash, cut off both ends (the stem end and the blossom end).
- Cut the squash into two pieces by cutting across the squash separating the neck from the bulbous lower portion.
- This will make the squash easier to handle when peeling.
- Using a good vegetable peeler, peel away the tough outside skin.
- I dont know why a vegetable peeler works so well, but it does.
- Place peeled squash on a cutting board and slice in half lengthwise.
- The bulbous portion of the squash contains the seeds.
- Using a spoon, scoop out the seeds.
- If the butternut you are using is an heirloom variety, such as Waltham butternut, the seeds can be cleaned, dried, and saved for planting in your garden next year.
- Just an FYI.
- Cut the squash halves into wide strips.
- Then cut across the strips, making large cubes.
butternut, potatoes, sweet onions, garlic, mushrooms, olive oil, salt, ground black pepper, parsley, thyme, fresh rosemary, chicken
Taken from tastykitchen.com/recipes/main-courses/herbed-roasted-chicken-and-vegetables/ (may not work)