Ina Garten's Engagement Chicken - recipe review (2024)

‘What’s the big deal about Ina Garten’s Engagement Chicken that I’ve been hearing so much about??’ I thought to myself. Well my dear reader, let’s find out!

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INA GARTENS ENGAGEMENT CHICKEN RECIPE REVIEW

Ok, first, let me just tell you how much I love Ina Garten. There are tons of chefs out there that I admire – Chris Consentino, Heston Blumenthal, Jaques Pepin, Julia Child, and let’s not forget my ultimate pretend boyfriend, Jamie Oliver. I like them all for different reasons.

But Ina Garten has something else that makes her super special. I think it’s because she cooks food that has that element of love they say needs to be in food to make it super delicious.

Also, she uses ingredients that are simple and identifiable while still making the final product seem to lean to the “high brow” set. Best of all the food is easy, yummy, easy, fun to make, and oh, did I mention easy?

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The Premise of Ina Garten’s Engagment Chicken

So let’s talk about Ina Garten’s Engagement Chicken recipe. The idea of this recipe is that a woman should cook this meal for her boyfriend in the hopes to blow his mind with her culinary skills so that he will, right then and there, ask her to marry him.

Honestly, I think the recipe started out as Ina Garten’s Roast Chicken Recipe – but as more and more women made it for their man, more and more engagement proposals were coming down the pipe, so they changed the name and the story behind the recipe.

Who cares though if the recipe has something magical about it, right?

So, changing the premise from regular roasted chicken to engagement chicken? Apparently, it’s worked.

Well.. let’s just say that it apparently worked for Meghan Markle and her handsome fiance. You know.. PRINCE HARRY…. yeah, that incredibly gorgeous dude. According to the stories, she whipped up this recipe, and he was so enamoured with her chicken wrangling skills in the kitchen that he popped the question!

While I didn’t make this recipe in the hopes of lasso’ing some dude into asking me to marry him, I DID want to see what the hype was all about. I mean, come on, – it made the most famous and gorgeous eligible bachelor give up his singlehood for life!………………. FOR LIFE!!

The recipe (which I’ll link below) is quite easy and straight forward.

What you need to make Ina’s Engagement Chicken:

  • 2 lemons
  • A whole head (not just a clove) of garlic
  • Oil
  • Salt and pepper
  • White wine (your favorite drinking wine, please!)
  • 3-4 lb chicken

Be sure to wash that chicken (I like to put a bit of vinegar or lime juice in the water just cuz I’m extra like that..lol) thoroughly, inside and out. Pat dry. Season the inside of the chicken with salt and pepper.

Cut the 2 lemons in quarters and place two pieces on the inside of the chicken cavity. Place the chicken in a roasting pan that’s just slightly larger than the chicken itself. Set it aside.

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In a bowl, cut up the onions and the other lemon. Cut the whole head of garlic in half LENGTHWISE.

Then, stuff the one half inside the chicken, which I almost forgot to do but the lightbulb came on near the end when I stared at the garlic wondering what it was doing there. The other half of the garlic was falling apart, so I took the skins off each clove and added them to the lemons and onions.

Season the lemon, garlic and onion mixture in the bowl with salt and pepper and 2 tablespoon of oil. Arrange them around the chicken in the roasting pan.

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Ina Garten's Engagement Chicken - recipe review (8)

Roast the chicken for 1 hour and 15 minutes. The recipe says if you poke the chicken in the crevice where the thigh meets the body, and the liquids run clear, it’s ready. As an experienced cook, you might be able to use your intuition and gauge that the bird is cooked, right?

However, for the newbies out there, I would have liked to see the recipe give a more reliable, temperature gauge setting, using a thermometer. (175 – 180 F is what it should read.)

Take the chicken out and set it aside, tented, to rest. Place the roasting pan on the stove top (or if it’s not stove top friendly, just transfer everything into a heavy pot). Add the wine, stock and flour and heat it until the sauce boils and thickens.

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Slice the chicken as you wish, and serve with the lemon/onion sauce.

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OK!! So, I did everything according to Ina Garten’s Engagement Chicken Recipe. Here are the changes I would make:

What Would I Change?

  1. One lemon is enough. I would use one half inside the chicken, and then maybe another quarter, sliced in tiny pieces, to accent the rest of the surrounding ingredients. I found the use of two whole lemons made the sauce quite bitter and too lemony.
  2. Strain (which I did) the sauce, because personally, biting into whole cloves of garlic (roasted or not) can’t be conducive to encouraging a proposal??
  3. If the lemon was cut into tiny slices, they soften up and add a more subtle flavor to the sauce
  4. I would also add some herbs. Fresh or dry, but I’d use Thyme and/or Rosemary
  5. You could consider making this without the wine and use more stock instead, but if you use wine, be sure to use a type you prefer to drink because those cooking wines are just nasty. If you like the taste of the wine, you’ll love it in the recipe.
  6. I thought the cooking time was perfect for a 3 – 4 lbs chicken. My chicken came out juicy and perfectly cooked but for new cooks, the recipe should state chicken temperature guidelines.
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Ina Garten's Engagement Chicken - recipe review (13)

VERDICT FOR THIS BAKED CHICKEN RECIPE:

I think, for the most part, this recipe is GREAT, however, I don’t think it’s that mind-blowingly awesome to spur a guy to get on one knee, food love drunk, and ask her to be his wife. But, I could be wrong, I’m only going on my preferences for taste. It was really well cooked/roasted and had an amazing flavor for roast chicken.

If I were to make it again, I would make the changes I suggested, and it would be incredible. (according to my tastes, however, I strongly suggest you take a peek at her recipe and make it, then decide for yourself! The recipe is linked below)

Also, because I’m a strong believer in not wasting anything. I would save the bones and such to make a stock with because stocks can be so incredibly versatile in adding extra flavor to the dishes you create. So not surprisingly, I DID save those bones and did an instructional post on how to make your very own stock from scratch .

Also, I made a few other recipes on how to use leftover chicken, such as:

  • Cheesy Chicken Bacon Pasta Casserole recipe,
  • my Basic Chicken Noodle Soup recipe,
  • Chicken Ranch Potato Bake
  • and my Slow Cooker Chicken Alfredo Soup

So there you have it, there’s my review on Ina Garten’s Engagement Chicken! If you’re not familiar with Mrs. Garten, you can head on over to her website (I’ll link it below), watch her on youtube (again, I’ll link below), and watch her cook some amazing dishes for her super cute hubby Jeffery or hosting a fabulous dinner party that I’d love to be invited to someday. lol.

Lastly, if you make this dish, PLEASE let me know in the comments below!! What did you think of it? Were any changes made to the recipe? DID YOU GET (OR MAKE!) A PROPOSAL AFTER SERVING IT???? 🙂

LINKS:

Ina Garten (The Barefoot Contessa) website here

Engagement chicken recipe link here.

*******PIN INA GARTEN’S ENGAGEMENT CHICKEN RECIPE REVIEW TO YOUR FAVORITE PINTEREST BOARD TO SAVE FOR LATER!*******

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Related

Ina Garten's Engagement Chicken - recipe review (2024)

FAQs

What temperature is engagement chicken done? ›

I prefer a middle ground between the two (if only because it's the way I've been doing it for years), which is to say: For crispy, crackly roast chicken skin with wonderfully juicy meat, try 425°F for 15 minutes per pound, or until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thigh reaches 165°F.

What does Ina Garten serve with her lemon chicken? ›

The sauce has garlic, thyme and lemon, and has so much flavor," Garten says. "And the whole thing takes like 5 minutes to put together... The best thing about this is that it makes the chicken and the sauce at the same time." Serve it over rice or quinoa, and the grains can absorb all of the sauce, Garten recommends.

Is chicken done at 165 or 180? ›

Simply insert your food thermometer into the thickest part of the chicken (for a whole chicken, that would be the breast). You know your chicken is cooked when the thermometer reads 180°F (82°C) for a whole chicken, or 165°F (74°C) for chicken cuts.

What temp is chicken most tender? ›

Fattier dark meat can stand a higher temperature than lean white meat. While it's safe to eat dark meat cooked to 165°, you'll get a bouncier bite. Allowing thigh meat and the like to reach somewhere between 175° and 190° will give you more tender meat because the connective tissues have longer to break down.

What is Ina Garten's favorite meal? ›

The one meal Ina simply couldn't live without is roast chicken. She even cites it as one of the reasons her husband, Jeffrey, proposed marriage in 1968.

Why do you rub lemon on chicken before cooking? ›

Like pickling, smoking, and curing, the practice of rinsing chicken with lemon juice probably started out as a way to neutralize any off-aromas in the meat and cut down on bacteria.

What does adding lemon juice to chicken do? ›

Here's why: Lemon juice helps to tenderize meat, but when left for too long, it will break down the proteins too much, making the meat tough and rubbery… sometimes even mushy. So, if you want tender, juicy, and flavorful chicken, make sure to only marinate the chicken for 2-3 hours.

What not to do when roasting a chicken? ›

The 5 mistakes to avoid with roast chicken
  1. Skipping the de-pluming step. ...
  2. Not cutting off the ends of the wings (the thinnest part) ...
  3. Skipping prep before roasting. ...
  4. Roasting the chicken in too much seasoning. ...
  5. Cooking the meat for too long or too little.
Oct 2, 2020

Do you bake chicken in oven covered or uncovered? ›

Larger cuts, such as whole chickens or bone-in pieces, often benefit from covered baking to ensure thorough and even cooking. Smaller cuts, like chicken breasts or tenders, can be baked uncovered for quick results.

Is it better to roast or bake chicken in the oven? ›

If you're cooking food that has a solid structure — like any type of meat or vegetables — no matter the temperature of the oven, you'll roast it. If you're cooking food that doesn't already have a solid structure, but will after it's cooked — like muffins, cake, bread, and casseroles — the proper method is baking.

Which side of the chicken faces up when roasting? ›

Place chicken breast-side up in a roasting pan or large ovenproof skillet. Stuff cavity with herbs and tie the legs together with kitchen twine. (If you don't have twine, leave the legs as they are.)

Is it better to butterfly or pound chicken breast? ›

Why You Should Butterfly a Chicken Breast. Butterflying a chicken breast gives you thinner, more even pieces that will cook quicker and more evenly. It also allows you to easily pound the meat to a very even thickness. Prepared this way, the split and pounded chicken breasts are called paillards.

Is 145 degrees safe for chicken? ›

The FDA Food Code recommends cooking chicken to 165°F (74°C). But the pasteurization of chicken is actually a function of both temperature and time. If you can hold your chicken at 145°F (63°C) for 8.5 minutes, you can achieve the same bacterial reduction as at 165°F (74°C).

What temperature is pull chicken done? ›

Once the liquid is boiling, reduce the heat and let simmer until the chicken reaches an internal temperature of 165 degrees F on an instant-read thermometer or is no longer pink in the center, about 8 to 16 minutes, depending upon the size and number of chicken breasts that you are poaching.

What is the best temperature for fall off the bone chicken? ›

Some chefs prefer to cook it to 170 to 180 degrees for that extra-tender, falling-off-the-bone experience. Bailey said he never recommends going over 165 degrees, but he said grill cooks should be careful to not get into the 190- to-200-degree range where chicken can become dry and hard.

What is the best temperature for raising chickens? ›

Optimal temperature is between 65° and 75°F. Anything above 75°F can cause an unhealthy amount of stress on the chickens, affect their organs, and potentially reduce their life expectancy. Because chickens do not have sweat glands, heat is trapped under their feathers.

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