Thursday, October 19, 2023

Braised Whole Chicken In The Pressure Cooker

This one’s lifted from the website that used to be called Hip Pressure Cooking (now Hip Cooking), but since lost in the rebranding. I also think it needed some adjustment to make it work a little better.

Ingredients: 

  • One 3-to-4 lb. whole chicken. I like to keep a couple fryers in the freezer, so this means some lead time; best to defrost overnight, or in water for the impatient.
  • 4 fresh rosemary sprigs, though I just used a 1/2 teaspoon of dried.
  • 3 fresh sage sprigs; again, 1/2 teaspoon (really, to taste) of dried
  • 3 fresh thyme sprigs (the same)
  • 1 lemon
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil. (Who are we kidding about this? See below.)
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 3/4 cup water, beer, or stock, as needed
Rinse the chicken inside and out and pat dry with paper towels. If there are giblets or the neck, you can use them to flavor the braise, so rinse them off, too, and set them aside.

Reserve one rosemary sprig for a garnish (ignore this if you use dried). Pull or snip the leaves from the three remaining sprigs, and also from the sage and thyme sprigs. Chop all the herb leaves. Grate the zest from the lemon, and set the lemon aside. Mix the chopped herbs, lemon zest, olive oil, salt, and pepper in a small bowl and then rub the mixture all over the outside and inside of the chicken. Alteration: set the mixture aside, because we will next...

Heat a large sauté pan over medium-high heat, and add enough vegetable oil to coat the pan. (Alteration: What planet do these people live on that one tablespoon is enough to thoroughly coat a large sauté pan?) Add the chicken and cook until browned on all sides, about 5 minutes per side. Alteration: Now add the herb mixture to the outside of the chicken. It will stick better to the bird and you will get more of it in the finished product. In fact, next time I do this, I might double the herb quantities, because it didn’t go very far. I strongly recommend nitrile gloves for this operation, especially right after frying the outside of the bird.

Squeeze the juice from the lemon and strain it into a measuring cup. Add water (or beer or stock) to equal one cup (or the minimum required by your cooker to reach pressure minus 1/4 cup — the chicken will release a lot of juice so the liquid needed to bring this dish to pressure is a little less than usual) and pour into the pressure cooker base. Add the bay leaf to the cooker along with the chicken giblets and neck if using.

If you have a trivet, support the chicken on it. Lower the chicken into the pressure cooker and pour any juices remaining in the sauté pan.

Close and lock the lid of the pressure cooker. Cook at high pressure for 20 minutes/stovetop or 26-28 minutes/electric (or nonstandard stovetop). Whn the time is up, open the pressure cooker with the Normal Release method.

Lift or slide the chicken out of the cooker and transfer to a serving platter, cover tightly with aluminum foil. Optional: for a golden skin, transfer to a baking dish and heat in a broiler for a few minutes right before serving.

Meanwhile, return the pressure cooker base to high heat and boil the contents until reduced to a sauce consistency, about five minutes. Chop the leaves from the remaining rosemary sprig. Pour the sauce through a fine-mesh strainer over the chicken, and sprinkle with the reserved rosemary. (Alteration: I was hungry, so this didn’t happen. But it sounds good.)

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