How To Bake Chicken?

How do you bake chicken in water?

  • I was at a cooking event last night. Someone there was making chicken breasts. It looked like the chicken was covered with water and then baked. I've never seen chicken cooked this way before, and I can't find instructions online. Can anyone help?

  • Answer:

    The nice thing about roasting/baking a chicken for dinner is that you can put it in the pan, add the spices and a little water, cover it with a lid or aluminum foil and put it in the oven where the chicken will practically take care of itself. You may choose to stuff your chicken with boxed or homemade stuffing before putting it in the oven. If you do just follow the directions on the the stuffing package. Ingredients: •Whole, or roasting chicken, 4 - 6 lbs. •1 t. poultry seasoning •1 t. garlic powder •1 T. onion powder •1 t. marjoram •1 t. sweet basil •1 t. salt •Alternative: 3 T. of a salt free spice mix like Mrs. Dash, that includes the most or all of the spices. •2T dried celery •Roasting pan or other oven safe dish that will hold the chicken easily. •Bulbed meat baster •empty salt or cheese/spice shaker Directions: 1.Turn your oven on to 365 degrees so that it can begin preheating. Measure your spices and mix them together in a cheese/spice or extra salt shaker and set them aside. If you choose to use a pre packaged salt free spice mix you can measure that directly from the container. 2 Peel away any fat located under the skin that you see. Remove the giblets if they are included with the chicken. The giblets are the heart, gizzard, and liver and they are usually in a paper sack inside the chicken. Set them aside. Then flush out the inside of the chicken with water, scrub the outside of the chicken with a vegatable, or small hand brush, and pat it dry. 3 Place the chicken in the pan you will be using to roast/bake it in. Take the spices and sprinkle them all over the top of the chicken. Pour just enough water into the bottom of the pan to cover it. (As the chicken bakes/roasts the juices and fat from the chicken will add to the water). This is when you will want to stuff the chicken if you want the stuffing to cook at the same time as the chicken. 4.Cover the chicken with tin foil or a lid and place into the oven. Every 30 minutes pull the chicken out of the oven and draw some of the water/chicken juices from the bottom of the pan and squirt it all over the top of the chicken. If you have stuffed the chicken you may want to inject some of the broth into the cavity of the chicken, as well. 5.The chicken should be done within an hour and thirty minutes to two hours. Insert a meat fork into the chicken's breast. If clear liquid runs or oozes out, then the chicken is done. Then you can remove the chicken from its pan and place it on a large plate or serving platter. 6 Gently scoop the stuffing out of the inside of the chicken with a table spoon or small serving spoon and place it into a separate dish before serving.

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Other answers

What you're doing is basically "poaching" the chicken (in water), but doing it with the heat created in an oven, not the heat created on a stovetop. You're not technically "baking" the chicken, as the 2nd answerer described, since baking involves *dry* heat and so does "roasting" which is what it's often called when meats (and veggies too) are cooked uncovered in the dry heat of an oven. There are *wet* heat cooking methods that can *just be done in an oven* though rather than on a stovetop, like braising, etc, which call for the foods to be cooked in hot liquids that come up no higher on the foods than halfway (and in the steam created because they're covered). Poaching (which is cooking in submerged in liquids so the liquid barely bubbles) in the oven is less common, but should work well because foods in pots or containers in an oven will heat more evenly than on a stovetop since the heat is coming from all around the pot in an oven, not just from the flame or coil underneath the stovetop. ...more info on poaching chicken: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20111226094817AAKPAEJ ...oven-poaching chicken: http://www.anastasiastable.com/TableTalk/2010/02/quick_tip_ovenpoaching_boneles.html https://www.google.com/search?q=how+to+poach+chicken+breasts+in+oven+-quart https://www.google.com/images?q=how+to+poach+chicken+breasts+in+oven+-quart .

Diane B.

You boil the chicken in water not really "bake."

myillusoryentity

You don't. To "bake" means to cook using dry heat. If the chicken was immersed in water, it wasn't baked, it was boiled or braised.

sheloves_dablues

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