Roast chicken with mushroom and sage butter under the skin
Stuffing a chicken that is to be roasted with butter, just under the skin, is one of the easiest ways you can give it a bit of va va voom and ensure a moist bird, too. The key thing is to lift the skin on the breast very carefully, you mustn’t tear it or the butter just runs out.
Pour some boiling water over the wild mushrooms and leave to soak for 30 minutes.
Drain (you can keep the soaking liquid for a mushroom soup or risotto) and chop the mushrooms.
Melt 15g (½oz) of the butter in a frying pan and sauté the fresh mushrooms until they are golden brown and quite dry: mushrooms throw moisture out as they cook and you need this to evaporate.
Add the wild mushrooms, stir around and cook for another couple of minutes.
Season with salt and pepper.
Scrape the mushrooms into a dish and leave to cool completely.
Mix the shallots and garlic in with the mushrooms, add a squeeze of lemon juice and the sage leaves.
Now add the remaining butter and mash everything together.
Put the butter mixture into the fridge to firm up.
When you’re ready to cook, preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F/gas mark 4.
Put the chicken into a small roasting tin or ovenproof dish.
Loosen the skin of the chicken, starting with the skin on the breast: carefully lift the skin and put your fingers in between the skin and the flesh, working your way down over the skin on the legs, too.
You must be careful not to tear the skin.
Now push the cold mushroom butter under the skin, spreading it down over the legs.
Press the top of the chicken skin once you’ve used up all the butter, to make sure it is fairly evenly distributed.
Season the bird with salt and pepper.
Put the chicken into the hot oven and cook for one hour, basting every so often.
Rest for 10 minutes under a double layer of foil.
I love this with pumpkin purée – you can fry some more sage leaves and put them on top of the purée – and tagliatelle or orzo, or a brown and wild rice pilaf.