Sear-roasted chicken breasts with orange-brandy sauce.

Chat today at 1 pm. Yesterday’s hit on the Herd is now online (and already out of date!).

I’ve adapted this recipe from the February 2009 issue of Fine Cooking – my favorite cooking magazine, and the only one I’ve received over the last five years – with a few tweaks and fixes, although the core concept is the same. It helps to brine the chicken ahead of time, but I don’t think that’s strictly necessary, since the sauce itself has so much flavor. The dish is excellent over couscous (we use whole wheat), which soaks up any excess sauce on the chicken. With about five minutes to go in the oven, I’ll throw some asparagus spears, sliced into two-inch lengths, into the pan and toss to coat in the pan juices and rendered chicken fat, then let the asparagus finish roasting with the chicken.

The recipe would also work great with salmon; skip the brine, sear 3 minutes on the flesh side, then flip and roast until cooked through.

1 whole bone-in, skin-on chicken breast, split into two halves*
1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice (navel or Valencia)
3 Tbsp salt
1 cup water

1 medium shallot, minced (about 1/4 cup total)
3 Tbsp butter
2 Tbsp brandy or cognac
1 (more) cup orange juice
1/2 cup reduced-sodium chicken broth
1 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley
1 orange, peeled and sliced into segments

*Yes, your butcher can split this for you, but if you own a chef’s knife, just flip the whole breast over and do it yourself to save a few dimes.

1. Combine 1 cup orange juice, 1 cup water, and salt, stirring until dissolved. (You can also heat 1/2 cup of water, dissolve the salt in it, then cool it down with ice to end up with a cup of water.) Place the chicken breasts in the brine for one to two hours.

2. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Remove the chicken breasts from the brine and pat dry. Season with salt and black pepper. In an oven-safe skillet or saute pan, heat about 1 Tbsp olive oil until hot but not smoking, and sear the chicken, skin side down, until well browned, 4-5 minutes. Flip and sear on the second side until lightly browned, 2-3 minutes. Place entire skillet in the oven and roast until 160 degrees in the center, 15-20 minutes.

3. Remove the skillet from the oven and place on a stove burner. Take the chicken out of the pan and place on a plate, under tented foil, to rest. Drain all fat from the pan and add 2 Tbsp butter and the shallot to the pan. Cook over medium heat, scraping the bottom of the pan (I use a wooden spatula) to remove all browned bits.

4. When the shallots have softened, turn off the heat and add the brandy. Return to medium heat and cook until most of the brandy has disappeared from the pan. Add 1 cup orange juice and cook over medium-high at a brisk simmer until thickened and reduced by half, then add the chicken broth and cook until thickened again.

5. Turn off the heat and add the parsley, 1 Tbsp butter, and orange segments, swirling to mount the butter in the sauce. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve sauce over sliced chicken.

Comments

  1. Thanks, I’ll try it tomorrow.

    I wish you would post more recipes here, you haven’t led me astray yet.

  2. I intend to do more recipes here over the winter. I just cook less during the regular season because I travel, which leads to fewer recipe posts.

  3. Do we get a Phoenix eats post?

  4. I didn’t go anywhere I haven’t previously reviewed.

  5. I am disapointed with that news. Spring training then….

  6. In your chat, you agreed with a questioner referring to the Phils as roughly a 45-55 underdog. Is this true? I was thinking that, even given a major mismatch, smart money would always bet on the underdog, right? What’s the biggest underdog a team would be?

  7. Keith, why would you take the chicken fat out of the pan before you build your sauce? As AB says, your just getting rid of the fond. It shouldn’t overpower the sauce and I would think that butter is only necessary if there’s not enough fat left in the pan after roasting.

  8. Fat isn’t fond. Fond is usually stuck to the bottom of the pan. If you find you’ve poured out a lot of brown bits, strain them out of the oil and return them to the pan. Chicken fat doesn’t have the right flavor for a sauce, but butter does.

  9. Solid dish… I would be interested in not only recipes but some cooking tips as well. The knife you recommended a few months ago was spot on. Also haven’t seen anything about this in you blogs/chats, but what about this Mills fellow? As a life long Astro’s fan I don’t know what to make of the state of the team. Now without Bags/Biggio around they don’t have that good guy feel to them anymore either. Not saying the two were heros or something, but just genuinely seemed like decent/stand-up guys and you wanted them to do well. Heck Biggio coaches at my old high school, sure his son goes there but I don’t know… I don’t believe that Barry Bond or Curt Schilling would do this.

  10. Thank god for a relatively low leverage World Series start for AJ tonight.

  11. re nba refs – I haven’t watched 10 minutes of an nba game since the kings lakers series. having an obvious fix on an event of that magnitude turned me off. too bad cause college bball has a fantastic game, while nba is an awful product. no bill simmons pollyanna 10,000 word coloumn will change my mind. that nba ref said what nearly everyone already knew. there is no integrity in the nba.

  12. Fair enough on the brown bits, but we’ll agree to disagree on the chicken fat. Thanks for the food updates, looking forward to more of them this winter.

  13. On the NBA: basketball’s my favorite sport, so naturally I follow the NBA closely. I always hoped that these rumors weren’t really true. I hadn’t quit on the league only because I love basketball and because there was no evidence that the league was shady – nothing to this degree, anyway. Now? I’m prepared to walk away.

    Not only are these allegations damning, but all things considered, I see no reason not to believe that they are true. We have a decade of examples – perhaps more – of the refs inserting themselves into game results, influencing the outcomes. I would have preferred that it was simply because they were terrible. Perhaps worst of all, David Stern and other league admins have sworn up and down that the league is clean, and (not without condescension) that we should be ashamed even for asking about it.

    I await Simmons’ take on this with bated breath. I suspect he’ll lay it all out after his book tour’s over.

  14. I’m sorry, I fail to see how the fix is obviously in with a league that saw it’s San Antonio franchise win four times in nine years.