Baking a Chicken
7 Dec 2004 01:45 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
the recipe says to cook the chicken--or the breast part of it--for seven to nine hours in a "low" oven. what does low mean? googling tells me that the gas setting term is "very slow" for 250 F or 120 C.
but all the recipes i can find are cooking chickens at around that 250 F-110 C range for one and a half, not eight and a half, hours. so what is "low", and why does a google on it produce nothing? is the recipe mis-typed?
why is my parents' phone busy?
but all the recipes i can find are cooking chickens at around that 250 F-110 C range for one and a half, not eight and a half, hours. so what is "low", and why does a google on it produce nothing? is the recipe mis-typed?
why is my parents' phone busy?
(no subject)
Date: 6 Dec 2004 11:53 pm (UTC)the advantage of slow roasting is that what makes meat tender is colagen fibers, which harden under the effect f high temperatures. at 55, you get to keep the collagen intact and still cook the meat, but of course it takes a long ass time.
the legend says the slow roasted 7 hours lamb can be eaten with a spoon it's so tender. :)
(no subject)
Date: 7 Dec 2004 12:00 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 7 Dec 2004 12:02 am (UTC)i also suggest er, checking the state of the meat some times after a few hours, huh? *g*
happy cooking!
(no subject)
Date: 7 Dec 2004 12:05 am (UTC)