Roasted Chicken Provençal

Roasted Chicken Provençal
Craig Lee for The New York Times
Total Time
1 hour 15 minutes
Rating
5(11,980)
Notes
Read community notes

This is a recipe I picked up from Steven Stolman, a clothing and interior designer whose “Confessions of a Serial Entertainer” is a useful guide to the business and culture of dinner parties and general hospitality. It is a perfect dinner-party meal: chicken thighs or legs dusted in flour and roasted with shallots, lemons and garlic in a bath of vermouth and under a shower of herbes de Provence. They go crisp in the heat above the fat, while the shallots and garlic melt into sweetness below. You could serve with rice, but I prefer a green salad and a lot of baguette to mop up the sauce. —Sam Sifton

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings
  • 4chicken legs or 8 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs
  • 2teaspoons kosher salt
  • 1teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • ½ to ¾cup all-purpose flour
  • 3tablespoons olive oil
  • 2tablespoons herbes de Provence
  • 1lemon, quartered
  • 8 to 10cloves garlic, peeled
  • 4 to 6medium-size shallots, peeled and halved
  • cup dry vermouth
  • 4sprigs of thyme, for serving
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

682 calories; 43 grams fat; 10 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 21 grams monounsaturated fat; 8 grams polyunsaturated fat; 35 grams carbohydrates; 5 grams dietary fiber; 7 grams sugars; 37 grams protein; 814 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Heat oven to 400 degrees. Season the chicken with salt and pepper. Put the flour in a shallow pan, and lightly dredge the chicken in it, shaking the pieces to remove excess flour.

  2. Step 2

    Swirl the oil in a large roasting pan, and place the floured chicken in it. Season the chicken with the herbes de Provence. Arrange the lemon, garlic cloves and shallots around the chicken, then add the vermouth to the pan.

  3. Step 3

    Put the pan in the oven, and roast for 25 to 30 minutes, then baste it with the pan juices. Continue roasting for another 25 to 30 minutes, or until the chicken is very crisp and the meat cooked through.

  4. Step 4

    Serve in the pan or on a warmed platter, garnished with the thyme.

Ratings

5 out of 5
11,980 user ratings
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Cooking Notes

I've made this about 5 times now, and it’s not much work relative to the super pay-off. I use a lot more garlic and shallots - like about 20 cloves of garlic and about 1.5 cups of shallots. I found a really good vermouth recently that blows the traditional Martini & Rossi away. The name is Dolin, and it's their blanc style. Found that it tastes great over ice too!
Brands of herbes de Provence that have a good amount of fennel seem to flavor this dish the best.

Did you bake with chicken skin side down or up? It's not clear in the recipe.

These are some marvelous and helpful notes. They recall a couple of truisms about the kitchen. First, "a large roasting pan" means different things to different people. One with relatively high sides will yield more "juice" than one with low. Second, oven temperatures vary. Roasting chicken in a 400-degree oven for an hour should almost by definition yield crisp skin. No? Maybe 425 on your oven will yield true 400. Love the idea of adding some knobs of butter! Cook on!

Am a bit confused. Should you cover both sides of the floured chicken with the olive oil? And do you cover the chicken when baking, or cook it uncovered?

Great recipe...have given it out to people more times than I can count. Adding to some of the other comments: 1) double the liquid at least. More vermouth, stock, white wine...doesn't matter but 1/3 cup is not enough. 2) I've found that 425 works better than 400. 3) if you live in the boondocks and can't get shallots, red onions work in a pinch.

Used 4 skinless bone-in thighs and 2 skin on, bone in breasts. Didn't have flour so subbed almond meal. Used enough oil to cover pan bottom so it ran freely. Cut the lemon in 1/8's, tucked 1 or 2 between each piece of chicken. Added the chopped shallots &garlic all over the place. Added about a cup of Vermouth &seasoned chicken liberally with the herbs. I turned the chicken over about half way through cooking it. Set oven at 425 and baked about an hour. Came out amazing.

Absolutely the best chicken ever! Very easy too. I added artichoke hearts, roasted red peppers and Kalamata olives.

I've made this dish quite a few times. I would not omit any of the ingredients called for with the exception of using white wine instead of vermouth since I don't keep vermouth in the house. What I find the most important aspect is to not crowd the chicken pieces. Each piece should have its own space which will aid in the crisping of the skin. I crowded a pot once with 8 large pieces. The taste was as it always is but the presentation was not as the skin that was crowded was a pale white.

I have made this three times and every time it turned out perfect. This is one of only two recipes I make that my partner rated a 10/10. I have a convection oven that I put on roast, put the chicken in a large iron skillet and it gives the chicken an absolute perfect browned skin. The herbs and seasonings are the perfect combination. This is the best roasted chicken out there if you are looking for a recipe that has a great combination of full seasonings and tender flavorful meat — amazing.

I thought that, too, going into the testing process. But the chicken skin renders fat in the oven, so it self-bastes to some degree and the result is deliciously crisp. Not getting that way? Your oven may be "low," meaning it's not delivering a true 400 degrees. In which case: Turn it up to 425.

Delicious, easy. I've made this several times. Use the vermouth; add more if you need more liquid. I use 2 lemons. I also double the shallots and garlic: they melt down to sweet wonderfulness (the garlic is great on the baguette). I've made this with bone-in, skin-on breasts, too, and they work great (you may need to adjust cooking time). Dish also reheats perfectly (skin won't be crisp). Dish can be assembled earlier in the day, covered, and refrigerated; add vermouth just before cooking.

I make this with 4 skin-on bone-in chicken breasts. Leftovers, if any, make a great chicken salad. It's leaner with the breasts, just as tasty. Used the convection on the oven @ 375, makes the skins brown and crispy.

Really, really good; one of the best chicken recipes ever, and SO SIMPLE. I love recipes that also teach a new technique you can use often. Thanks, Sam, I've pre browned chicken for the last time. The technique of dusting with flour and basting half way through gives the crispest skin ever. Basting is the key step - baste generously.

Excellent, easy, delicious! However, like several of other posters here, I increased the olive oil a bit and used a little over ½ cup of Vermouth. Also, as the skin didn't appear to be too crisp, I finished the dish under the broiler (low setting) for the last 5 minutes or so. BTW, you can't have too many garlic cloves or shallots in this dish!

This dish is stunning. I added additional vermouth, not a lot just some; it needed it. I also an additional half of a lemon. I cooked 9 thighs (the 10th would have overcrowded my roasting pan). At the half-way point I added French green beans to the pan. Pushing some of them gently into the sauce, they were just right at the end at about the 1hr point. I served with quinoa (1.5 cups dry). For four. Everyone said, "Wow." It was the recipe!

I spatchcock a chicken and bake it on a bed of potatoes and vegetables in chicken stock. Easy and absolutely the best chicken I've ever had! https://youtu.be/4GfzIaYiEX4?si=PUeg269YwOIXWXEK

This was one of my father's favorite recipes and it's still one of my go-tos. I do double the vermouth-otherwise the flour soaks it all up and you don't get the delicious sauce.

Showing a weight in ounces for the amount of chicken would be helpful. The chicken thighs I've bought recently have been huge, no way that two thighs would be equivalent to one leg.

How about putting some buttered slices of stale bread underneath -- that's from Dorie Greenspan. People will fight over who gets to eat the bread -- delicious! -- when the chicken is served!

This recipe is so flexible and easy. I didn't have shallots, used diced onions. Didn't have vermouth, used white wine. Didn't have herbs de provence, used italian seasoning. Is it even the same recipe???? Roasted in the pain with lots of lemon and garlic. My family loved it.

I have made this twice and find it delicious and easy. I made it the first time for last minute guests and everyone loved it (recipe requests too). I made it tonight for a second time after a long busy day because it really is so easy. I followed directions exactly and cooked in a large oval le cresuet, ending up with plenty of liquid but still slightly crispy chicken skin.

4/29/24 Used 2/3 cup sweet vermouth. Try 1 cup next time. I cut the lemon in 1/8ths. Shallots were sweet and good. Definitely use them. Otherwise small red onions quartered. Basted after 20 minutes and it was done after another 20. Might try 375° next time. Used the roasting pan but a large cake pan would allow a larger serving. Used 5 bone and skin thighs. Important to keep space between the thighs so they brown.

I cooked this for the first time using six, skin-on, bone-in chicken thighs. I used three tablespoons of butter and a splash of olive oil. I used a generous one-half cup of white wine. I used salt and pepper on the chicken thighs's downside. Why salt the skin? No need to baste the skin. If you use enough wine the recipe is more of a braise. We stopped up every cc of the sauce with a baguette. This is a great recipe.

Substituted orange juice for vermouth and a red onion for the shallots. Delicious. Even my wife of loved it.

Absolutely delicious AND easy. This is going to be a go-to for me.

The fragrance and beauty of this dish when finished is amazing. Found a stunning roasting pan on sale ($15) so I was double excited to make this dish. I live on my own and am teaching myself to cook/bake and having a blast. Followed the recipe, doubled the shallots/garlic and used wine. But, was cooking for 4 servings using 4 bone on chicken thighs (work lunch and leftovers) and neglected to cut back on the other items for 4 servings. Ugh :) The dish got crowded. Still delicious though.

I made this recipe the other night. It tasted very good but I found that when it was time to baste there was no liquid left in the pan to baste with. I used the prescribed amount of olive oil and vermouth. Anyone else have that experience?

It may be that the sides of the pan are not high enough.

Yes, I don't have a deep roasting pan so I add more vermouth.

Tasty and easy to make! Followed suggestions to increase liquid (white wine for us), shallots and garlic and would add even more next time. And there will be a next time.

Excellent, easy, and going in the rotation! Cooked 8 bone-in, skin-on thighs on an 11 x 17 sheet pan (uncovered). Increased lemons to 2 and vermouth to 1 C, and added 2 pads of butter in the center of the pan. Chicken was skin side down the first 25 -30 min., flipped the last 25 - 30 min. and basted with juices, and then broiled on low for 3 - 5 min. to crisp the skin.

Fabulous, Looks Great and Tastes so wonderful.I was glad to use my fresh Herbes de Provence. for a change. Fresb Thyme sprigs is delightful garnish! I love the notes and wish I had a high sided pan!

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Credits

Adapted from Steven Stolman

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