Brown Butter Sage Chicken with Asian Pears
If you follow me on social media, then you know I’ve been harping on and on about the Intimate Holiday Feast recipe eBook I made in collaboration with my mum - Saving Dinner - as a gift for all of you!
I decided to share my favorite recipe from the eBook here on the blog - my Brown Butter Sage Chicken with Asian Pears. It is my favorite way to roast a whole chicken, and it’s sooo so so very good!!! I can’t praise it enough (please excuse my lack of humility).
We created this menu because we know a lot of families have had to cancel Thanksgiving plans due to the global pandemic (ourselves included), so we put together a slightly smaller, but still very special, holiday spread!
The FREE eBook includes 7 recipes: Brown Butter Sage Chicken with Asian Pears (that I’m sharing today on here) + Quick Pan Gravy + Acorn Squash Stuffed with Sausage and Fennel Cornbread Stuffing + Garlic Herb Mashed Potatoes + Green Beans and Chanterelle Mushrooms in a Garlic White Wine Sauce + Cranberry Apple Salad with a Maple Dijon Vinaigrette + and Leanne’s Pumpkin Cheesecake.
If you want to download the eBook (which I obviously recommend you do) just click here.
I promised to include modifications for the recipe if you are still roasting a turkey this year - you’ll find my notes on how to alter the recipe for a turkey listed below.
How to Use this Recipe for a Turkey instead of a Chicken:
This method can be used on a turkey that’s 11 to 14 pounds.
First and foremost, the night before you roast your bird, pat turkey dry with paper towels then rub entire exterior and cavity in kosher salt. Place on a rimmed baking sheet, and put in the refrigerator uncovered. This dry brine will help ensure a more tender meat and crispy skin (two crucial elements that can often get screwed up when roasting a turkey). You can do this up to 2 days prior to roasting.
Since the turkey is much bigger than a chicken, you’ll need to double the ingredients in the original recipe (ie: two sticks of butter, 2 heads of garlic, 6 pears, etc).
Remove turkey from refrigerator about an hour before roasting.
Preheat oven to 450 degrees, and then follow instructions 2 through 6. When following these steps be sure to a LARGE (not medium) roasting pan or rimmed baking sheet. If you have a roasting pan with a rack, you can place your turkey on that instead of the pears, onion, and garlic if it’s easier for you.
Tuck tips of wings under the bird to prevent burning.
Optional addition: adding a cup of white wine or broth to the bottom of the roasting pan (if using a rimmed baking sheet, best to avoid since you’ll need enough room for juices the turkey will release while it cooks.
Place turkey in oven and roast for 30 minutes, then reduce heat to 350, cover the breast gently with foil, and continue to roast for another 2 to 2 1/2 hours or until a meat thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh reads 165 degrees.
Remove from oven and allow to rest for about 30 minutes before cutting in and serving.
(if you make the Quick Pan Gravy from the eBook too, simply double the amount for ingredients listed as well)