Menu highlight – Roasted Jidori Chicken

Roasted Jidori Chicken by Chef Robert Conaway & aGreatChef.com

Menu highlights is a new feature that I am going to start doing on occasion. Highlighting items off our breakfast, lunch, dinner and small plates menu’s, offering you a bit more of a description that can be placed on our menu or that our server’s can remember. This is an opportunity lost to most chef’s, a way to truly describe one’s creations and the ingredients behind it.

I have chosen to start this off by focusing on my Jidori Chicken dish, for no other reason than I like this image and I am hungry from some poultry. My needs aside, this is a very tasty and popular dish with roots in southeast Asia.


Jidori chicken is a breed of chicken that in Japanese means “chicken of the earth”. It was bred to be a tastier kind of bird and was brought into the limelight by chef’s practicing Asian fusion cuisine in LA and SF 15+ years ago. It tends to be a smaller chicken, but offers up more flavor and is not laden with hormones or other chemicals.

Our Jidori chicken starts off with an Issan or eastern Thai chicken marinade. This marinade enhances the flavor of the chicken without adding unnecessary flavors and keeps it very moist. Left to rest for a couple of hours the chicken is roasted daily prior to each service. I picked up this marinade when visiting the village of one of my Thai instructors while I was studying in Thailand almost 10 years ago. Deep in the heart of Issan, the village was 30 miles from the Lao border. I was lucky enough to sleep in a traditional Thai house, harvest rice and wander through a village no foreigners had been to since the ’60′s (see bike photo to the left). Sitting at a small roadside stand, I tasted this chicken and could never forget the taste and the warmth of fall in Thailand.

On our dinner menu, I pair this with our locally grown mashed potatoes, pan roased haricot verts (that’s green beans in French ;) ), roasted whole garlic cloves and shallots and a wonderful au jus sauce. This dish was extremely popular during the heat of summer and I expect that it will only gain in it’s popularity as the weather cools and the seasons change.

This dish brings together the subtle flavors of southeast Asia and locally grown ingredients in a tasteful and visually stimulating manner. Honestly, I love this dish and I hope you do to.

Best,

chefRob

5 comments to Menu highlight – Roasted Jidori Chicken

  • Your pictures look fantastic…The idea of Roasted Jidori Chicken is wonderful… Myself and the members of recipebuddys.com are looking for chicken recipes…maybe you can post some of your recipes on the site… I am sure the members would be very greatful…thanks

    Andy
    http://www.recipebuddys.com

  • Andy,

    Would love to post some recipes. You’ll have to give me a week or so, as I am in the process of moving houses at the moment.

    best…chefRob

  • jay

    Seriously???? You are just another victim of good marketing. This chicken is no different form other properly and humanly raised chicken. If you are willing to pay a premium for this then I have some ‘Organic’ air to sell you!!!

  • Hey Jay,

    Thanks for stopping by and adding your 2 cents. Always nice to hear from those who read my blog.

    Victim of good marketing, perhaps. In all actuality, when we opened the restaurant my (then) F&B director loved the Jidori chicken that was on a menu at a fav restaurant of his…so that is how and why we went with this type of chicken.

    Just a little FYI, there are 3 traditional breeds of chicken indigenous to Japan, Jidori, Shokoku, and Shamo. Jidori means indigenous chicken and retains primitive chicken characteristics from back in the day. I do not know if you like to read technical papers on genetics but here is one with a ton of information on the chickens from Japan. There is also a discussion on this topic from a few years back over at eGullet, it’s a readers digest version and a bit easier to read, IMO.

    Additionally, here is a link to a more recent article about heirloom poultry from the Atlantic and how breed, food and environment effect the taste and flavor of chickens. So I would beg to differ that Jidori is ” is no different form other properly and humanly raised chicken”, but that’s just me.

    Cheers.

  • Christian

    Just want to say what a great blog you got here!
    I’ve been around for quite a lot of time, but finally decided to show my appreciation of your work!

    Thumbs up, and keep it going!

    Cheers
    Christian

Leave a Reply

  

  

  

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

My Go-To Books