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Ultimate Roast Chicken Recipe: Must-Try Tips!

Learn how to make perfect roast chicken right in your own kitchen. We’ll tell you the tools, spices, and cooking tips you’ll need to roast a whole chicken, including how long to cook it and how to get the juiciest meat, crispiest skin, and most delectable flavor. Is your mouth watering yet? Let’s get started!

How to Roast a Chicken

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In this chicken roasting guide, we’ll cover:

Read on to learn everything you need to know about roasting the perfect chicken every single time.

Roasting Tools

All you need is a roasting pan (or a rimmed baking sheet in a pinch) and an instant-read meat thermometer. Setting a roasting rack into the pan is optional but will help the chicken cook more evenly, since air can circulate freely under the chicken. With a roasting rack, the chicken won’t be resting in its own drippings, which will give you crispier skin. For easier cleanup, you can line the pan with aluminum foil.

Meredith

You can also spatchcock (aka butterfly) your chicken, or remove the backbone and flatten it out before roasting on a flat rack in a roasting pan or rimmed baking sheet. A spatchcocked chicken roasts more quickly and evenly and results in lots of crispy skin. Read more about how to spatchcock and roast the juiciest chicken ever.

Brining Chicken (Optional)

Brining is one secret to really flavorful, juicy roast chicken. You can either wet-brine by soaking the chicken in a salt water solution, or dry-brine by rubbing the chicken with salt and optional seasonings. If your chicken is kosher, you’re in luck: it’s already brined.

How to wet-brine a non-kosher chicken:

How to dry-brine a non-kosher chicken:

If you’re not brining, simply pat the chicken dry with paper towels to remove extra moisture and help the skin brown. For more on brining your bird, check out How to Brine Turkey.

Roast Chicken Flavor-Boosters

A chicken roasted with nothing but salt, pepper, and butter is very tasty indeed. But it’s also easy to build on these basic flavors. Chop up fresh herbs and tuck them under the chicken’s skin along with a few pats of butter, or stuff sprigs into the chicken cavity along with quartered onions and cloves of garlic. Wedges of aromatic fruit such as lemons or oranges will perfume the bird as it roasts, infusing the meat and the pan juices with extra flavor.

Photo by Baking Nana.

Roast Chicken Dry Rubs

Many cooks use a dry rub — a blend of dried and ground spices — rubbing them under the chicken’s skin and inside the cavity. Since they’re under the skin, the flavorings won’t burn; plus they’ll infuse the meat. This is a great way to add some spice if you’ll be discarding the skin.

Check out our collection of Rub Recipes.

Skin On or Off?

Crispy, fragrant roast chicken skin is delicious, but can be fatty. But whether you eat it or remove it, always roast with the skin on, as it holds in moisture and keeps the meat from drying out.

How to Truss a Chicken for Roasting

If you’re roasting a whole chicken that’s not been spatchcocked (see above), you can truss the bird before roasting it — that is, tie it with butcher’s twine to keep the legs close to the body. This is not an essential step, but it does make the chicken slightly easier to handle, and it helps hold the stuffing in if you’ve stuffed the chicken.

Trussing the bird | Photo by Meredith.

Roasting Methods

There are two methods for roasting a whole chicken:

1. Regular-heat method:

2. High-heat method (this creates a crispy, darker skin):

VIDEO: Orange Herb Roasted Chicken

Here’s a roast chicken recipe that follows the regular-heat method.

How to Tell When Your Roast Chicken Is Done

Whether you roast a chicken using the regular-heat or high-heat method, a whole chicken is ready when a instant-read meat thermometer inserted into the inner thigh (close to but not touching the thigh bone) reads at least 165 degrees F (74 degrees C).

Meredith

How Long to Roast a Chicken

Use this chart to determine how long to roast your chicken:

Roasting Times Chart

Weight (in lbs.) Regular Method High Heat Method
2.5 to 3 1 hour 15 minutes 1 hour
3 to 3.5 1 hour 25 minutes 1 hour 10 minutes
3.5 to 4 1 hour 35 minutes 1 hour 20 minutes
4 to 4.5 1 hour 45 minutes 1 hour 30 minutes
4.5 to 5 1 hour 55 minutes 1 hour 40 minutes
5 to 5.5 2 hours 5 minutes 1 hour 50 minutes
5.5 to 6 2 hours 15 minutes 2 hours
6 to 6.5 2 hours 25 minutes 2 hours 10 minutes
6.5 to 7 2 hours 35 minutes 2 hours 20 minutes
7 to 7.5 2 hours 45 minutes 2 hours 30 minutes

NOTE: These times are for unstuffed whole (not spatchcocked) birds. Add 15 minutes to the total cooking time if you’re roasting a stuffed chicken. And as with the chicken itself, make sure the stuffing reaches a temperature of at least 165 degrees F (74 degrees C).

A spatchcocked chicken takes less time to roast. A 3-lb spatchcocked chicken roasted at 400 degrees F (200 degrees C) can be done in about 45 to 55 minutes. Try this recipe for Butterflied Roast Chicken with Lemon and Rosemary.

Favorite Roast Chicken Recipes

  • Juicy Roasted Chicken
  • Roast Chicken with Rosemary
  • Cornbread Stuffed Chicken
  • Lemon Stuffed Chicken
  • Raisin Rice Stuffed Chicken

See all of our Roasted Chicken Recipes

You might also like:

  • How to Cook Amazing Chicken
  • Roast Chicken Dinner 4 Different Ways
  • How To Spatchcock And Roast The Juiciest Chicken Ever
  • 8 Genius Tips from Jacques Pépin for Making Better Chicken
  • 8 No-Cook Meals You Can Make From Rotisserie Chicken
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