Rosemary Apple Chicken

Ingredients
- 1 whole chicken (2-3 pounds)
- ¼ cup grapeseed oil or olive oil
- ¼ cup balsamic vinegar
- 1 teaspoon celtic sea salt
- 4 apples, cored and sliced
- 4 sprigs rosemary
Instructions
- Rinse the chicken, pat dry with a paper towel and place in a 9 x 13 inch baking dish
- Drizzle with oil and vinegar, then sprinkle with salt
- Arrange the apples around the chicken in the baking dish
- Place the sprigs of rosemary under the chicken
- Bake at 350°F for 90 minutes, until browned on the outside
- Serve
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 50 minutes
Tried this recipe?Mention @elanaspantry or tag #elanaspantry!
This delicious fruited chicken dish is great for guests, providing warm soft apples as comfort food along with a good dose of protein – all in one dinner.








elana says
Sarah –Yes a kosher l’pesach balsamic would work very well in turning this into a Passover dish. Thanks for the clarification/suggestion!
sarah says
Balsamic vinegar is made from wine and is therefore not chometz. Vinegars that are grain-based are the problem.
Bartenura makes a kosher for passover one that is probably available in most supermarkets around this time of year.
I use it alot on Pesach!
Elana says
Hi M, I am currently working on a recipe for roasted chicken with oranges.
Also, Claudia Roden (my favorite cookbook author –she is an Egyptian Jew and has amazing Sephardic recipes) has some good recipes using Morrocan salted lemons with chicken. I love her book, Arabesque.
~M says
Hi Elana,
Besides apples and peaches, what other fruit have you roasted alongside your poultry? I’m trying to come up with an option that would be in season now, but am drawing blanks.
Thanks!
elana says
~M, I think this is a great idea. I think for Pesach I would use some lemon juice and maybe a tablespoon of agave to replace the sweetness of the balsamic. Thanks for all of your comments and ideas!
Elana
yehudis says
LOVED THIS! I made it for pesach :) You CAN totally get OU P balsamic vinegar (Bartenura). Of course there is also apple cider vinegar for pesach which might be an option.
OU-P Balsamic: http://www.allinkosher.com/p-32066-bartenura-balsamic-vinegar-of-modena-85-oz-250ml-kosher-parve.aspx
~M says
Hmm, what about lemon or lime juice – another acid? It might not taste as sweet, but it would also tenderize the meat. When I make my turkey, I put lemons and lemon juice under the skin (like others do with butter) and achieve the same effect and the meat does not taste lemony, at least to me.
Elana says
M- Yes, I completely spaced on that too. Hmm, I wonder what we could use for this instead of the vinegar. It would make such a nice main dish for a festive Pesach meal. if I think of anything I’ll let you know. Likewise, keep me posted if you get a good idea for a vinegar substitute…
Elana
DrD says
How about reduced orange, lemon or lime juice? or pomagranate juice?
Deborah says
Could you use Manischewitz?
~M says
Unfortunately, I momentarily forgot about the balsamic when I made my comment about Pesach; no vinegar is allowed. But it will be great the rest of the year, especially for Shabbat dinners.
Elana says
Hi M- Great to hear from you again. I am glad that you and your fiance liked this dish and enjoyed hearing about the twists you added to it –love the idea of serving this for Pesach, I might just have to do that myself!
Elana
~M says
Hi Elana!
You inspired me to make a version of this rosemary apple chicken tonight for dinner and it was a huge hit! My fiancé even said that he thinks it belongs in a restaurant :)
I ended up with a slightly larger chicken – 4.5 lbs – since I wanted leftovers. A few hours before cooking, I destemmed 1-2 sprigs of rosemary and let them marinate in some extra virgin olive oil. I later added salt and pepper to the mixture.
After washing the chicken, I separated the skin from the muscle and slathered the rosemary/oil mixture in this area. This way, if I take off the skin (which I do for most of the chicken), there is still flavor on the meat. I also put another sprig in the cavity – I wasn’t sure what you meant by under the chicken.
Instead of using a pyrex lasagna-style dish or roasting pan, I arranged the chicken breast-side down in my Circulon dutch oven. I put the apples around the chicken, but next time will cut them thicker to discourage disintegration. I cooked it covered at a slightly lower temperature, and only uncovered it for the last 30 minutes of cooking, which resulted in crispy skin and juicy, moist chicken.
I am so happy with the results. This dish will definitely be made again during Pesach, possibly for my seder, which my grandparents are flying in for.
In the meantime, I have my leftovers to look forward to:
– a spinach salad with breast meat, fresh pineapple chunks, dried cranberries, and some shredded carrots and apples (I love colorful salads)
– my Pumpkin chicken skillet, based off of Gluten-Free Mommy’s pumpkin chicken tortillas (but I try to limit my corn-intake so my version tops the filling on baked sweet potatoes. Yumm!
Thanks again!
Brenda G. says
Hi, The pumpkin chicken you mentioned sounds so interesting. Can you share how you make it? Thank you! :)