• Chicken Crown
  • Chicken Crown
  • Chicken Crown
  • Chicken Crown

Chicken Crown 1.3 kg

£17.00

In stock
  • Each crown weighs approximately 1.3 kg and serves 3–4.

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We currently have 5 remaining in stock.
  • Delivered fresh
  • Great for home roasting
  • Cook on the BBQ
  • Suitable for freezing

Product description

Chicken Crown – A Simpler Way to Roast
Roasting a whole bird to perfection can be tricky, as achieving evenly cooked breasts and legs is a challenge. A chicken crown offers a simpler solution, reducing cooking time while delivering succulent, juicy meat. Try stuffing with half a lemon and sprigs of thyme, or basting with a yoghurt-based tandoori marinade before roasting at a high heat.

Our free range, slow grown chicken crowns are ideal for a range of preparations, offering deep flavour and tender texture. If you favour the breast, cooking it on the crown is a smart choice as the bone helps retain moisture and enhances the flavour. And once roasted, you’re left with the bones for a nourishing stock.

Inspired by Chef George Ryle
"Browned in a pan with foaming butter and then roasted through the oven on a bed of wild mushrooms. Served with a side dish of little Austrian dumplings called Spätzle and a Vermouth cream sauce.

Brined overnight and then poached in stock. Add some rice, pasta or noodles plus some vegetables of your choice for a healthy and restorative broth.

For pure simplicity, roast the crown hard, smothered in butter, with fresh thyme, lemon and garlic in its cavity. Let it cool, carve off the bone and slice thinly. Then proceed to make an epic sandwich – good quality bread, a fairly aggressive aïoli, perhaps with some wild garlic chopped through it if the season is right and watercress. Hard to top that!

Don’t forget to keep the bones for bone broth. Just cover with water and bring to a gentle simmer, add peppercorns, fennel seeds, an onion, a carrot and a couple of fresh bay leaves."

Ingredients

Free range chicken, slow-grown to full maturity at 81 days.

Cooking advice

Firstly, ensure the chicken crown is at room temperature as this will help it to cook evenly. Rub a couple tablespoons of olive oil over the chicken crown, then season with a good pinch of coarse sea salt and a decent grinding of black pepper. You may want to put a bunch of thyme or rosemary inside the cavity of the bird, perhaps with a lemon halved. Alternatively, you could flavour some soft butter with thyme leaves, lemon zest, coarse sea salt and cracked black pepper and massage the butter between the skin and flesh of the bird.

Place in an oven at 220°C (200°C if using a fan oven) for 15-minutes. At this stage bast the bird well, spooning the juices over the breasts. Reduce the temperature to 190°C (170°C fan) and roast for a further 30-minutes, basting a couple more times during this period. Insert a skewer into the thickest part of the breast, if the juices run clear the crown can be removed from the oven, if not place back in the oven and test every 5-minutes until cooked.

Following cooking, a rest of 15-20 minutes is advisable before carving.

Journal

You’ll find both a detailed guide on How to Cook a Chicken Crown and George Ryle’s Chicken Crown Recipe with Wild Mushrooms and Cream Sauce now available on our journal.

Background

Swaledale is a whole carcass butcher, which means in addition to our chicken crowns, we offer a full range of fresh, free range chicken cuts including thighs, breasts and wings. Naturally versatile, our high welfare chicken suits any occasion, from curries and summer barbecues to classic roast dinners.

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