Last Sunday, I schlepped over to the New Amsterdam Market at New York’s South Street Seaport. This is the third installation of the market, which runs a few days a year and and features some of the region’s top proponents of local and sustainable food. The goal is for the market to become a permanent fixture of the South Street Seaport, but for now, we Manhattan foodlovers must settle for having some of the region’s top purveyors and producers of fruits, vegetables, meats, cheese, bread, and more in the same place only a few times a year. It’s like a Greenmarket on steroids.
After stuffing my face with bread and cheese samples; an excellent ham, pickle, and butter sandwich from Marlowe and Sons; and a slice of delicious caramelized leak and ricotta tart from a baker I don’t remember, I began to think about dinner. I did not have much cash on me, so I passed by two of my favorite Greenmarket meat producers, 3 Corner FIeld Farm and Flying Pigs Farm, and set my sight on the $5 chickens at Bo Bo Chicken. I was unfamiliar with Bo Bo chicken, but the friendly lady at the stall informed me that they sell super fresh (i.e. less than a day from the slaughterhouse) poultry. She told me they sell mostly to Asian markets, but also deliver fresh poultry to some of New York’s finest restaurants. I bought a medium-sized chicken for $5 dollars, and they also gave me a free tote bag with an ice pack so I could safely get the chicken home to the Upper East Side in this 90 degree weather. A great deal for a what sounded like a great chicken. Here’s what it looked like when I put it on my cutting board to prepare dinner:
This chicken was so fresh that it had seen little in the way of a butcher’s table. I had only dealt with headless and feetless chicken before, but I was able to quickly get the chicken into it’s more familiar form with a few chops of my knife. I threw the head and feet into the freezer for a stock I will be making later down the road.
To prepare the chicken, I used a recipe for roasted chicken with lemon’s from Marcella Hazan’s The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking. Roasting a chicken does not get much easier than this. Just take two lemons, roll them and squish them, poke a bunch of holes into each, and stuff them into the cavity of the chicken. Season the chicken with salt and pepper, truss it, and into the oven it goes. Here’s what it all looked like after cooking at 350 degrees for an hour, then 20 minutes at 400 degrees:
Unfortunately, I failed to dry the chicken well enough after I washed it, so the skin did not get as brown or as crispy as I would have liked. Thankfully, the meat was deliciously moist and flavorful with the lemon juice that it absorbed while in the oven. Marcella even convinced me to retract my statement that the best roast chickens are cooked with generous amounts of butter. This chicken had no butter, and was as delicious as any roast chicken I have made. It did, however, have a good amount of salt, so I stand by my belief that salt is a roast chicken’s best friend.


7 responses so far ↓
Jude // July 2, 2008 at 1:09 am
I’ve always wanted to try this recipe… I have the same book.
It’s can’t be your fault that the skin didn’t get crisp like you wanted – the chicken may have been so fresh that the skin is more moist than usual.
howardeb // July 2, 2008 at 1:13 am
Thanks for taking the blame off of me
You may be right about the skin being more moist than usual, but I did do a slightly lackluster job of drying the chicken with a towel and rushed through it. I guess it was a combination of both of those factors.
Anita Lee // July 2, 2008 at 2:27 am
You should try our Black Feather Chickens next time, they roast amazingly well. The skin crisps like no other chicken. Feel free to come by my store to pick one up.
howardeb // July 2, 2008 at 3:08 am
Thanks, Anita! I have added Bo Bo Poultry to my list of favorites. I’ll definitely have to try one of the Black Feather Chickens. Excuse my ignorance, but how is a black feather chicken different from the standard chicken?
Anita Lee // July 2, 2008 at 11:51 am
The black feather chicken is a different breed. They have a narrow breast and larger thighs and drums. They take twice as long to grow. The skin crisps up and they are perfect for slow roast. This is the chicken we are known for. But it is a little more expensive. Anyways you’re welcome to come down and I can give you a mini-poultry & game show & tell lesson. I’m usually at the retail store, tuesdays, thursday, & friday and most saturdays. 287 broome street 8am – 3pm 212.274.0130, but we are closing this store at the end of july, so come soon.
Anita Lee // July 2, 2008 at 11:52 am
We are closing just this branch, but we will still be available at all these markets and more… not listed.. http://bobochicken.com/markets.htm
Just look for our yellow wing tag!
howardeb // July 2, 2008 at 12:02 pm
I didn’t realize the Broome St. store is still open. I’ll be sure to pay you a visit in the next few weeks for my poultry lesson