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Of Food and perhaps a little about me

Stuffed Chicken Thighs with Roasted Vegetables - Stuff it up!

“Hey! Stop it! I’m really stuffed!!” This must be what the chicken thigh was telling me. Instead of making the usual roasted chicken, I added some stuffing to the chicken thigh. The idea struck me when I recalled having chicken ballotine at a café, chicken breast or thigh rolled with some vegetables inside.

There are 2 pots of edible herbs added to my ‘mini garden’, namely basil and lemon balm. Fresh basil comes in handy when I whip up pasta dishes which are regular meals in the house. Or simply just toss them together with my salad. I didn’t know why I chose to grow lemon balm. It’s from the mint family, not much of a mint smell, but very strong lemon scent. Rubbing the leaves sometimes makes me happy, although sometimes I thought I am inhaling Mama Lemon, the dish detergent! I figured I could use it for baking which I seldom do these days. Well, I can also chopped them up and toss with salad too, for an added zesty taste.

As these 2 pots of herbs starts to flourish, I was so eager to harvest them. So apart from stuffing sautéed diced mushrooms and carrots with the chicken thigh, I stuffed together some of my freshly harvested basil and lemon balm leaves. You can omit these 2 herbs totally, as I was just getting excited that I wanted to use them in anything I cook!

I should have gotten some kitchen twine to tie up the chicken thigh tight instead, I used toothpicks to stitch them up, which didn’t worked very well. As you can see from the photo, the stuffing were dropping out.

The chicken thighs didn’t look good after they were roasted as they were a bit dry on the outside and still slightly raw on the inside. I would probably lower the oven temperature and roast them longer if I were to make this again. Another thing I will try is to use a rolling pin and roll it over the chicken thigh. This might make them thinner and thus a larger surface for containing the stuffing. Or I would roast a whole chicken, with some rice stuffing as well. That would be really nice to have for a weekend dinner!

Stuffed Chicken Thighs with Roasted Vegetables
Serves 2

3 chicken thighs, deboned
30g butter
150g fresh shitake mushrooms, diced
1 small carrot, diced
2 big russet potatoes, cut into wedges
1 white onion, quartered
1 bulb garlic
4 baby corns
½ zucchini, cut into chunks
½ capsicum, cut into chunks
½ cup fresh basil leaves
½ cup lemon balm leaves
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
olive oil
2 tbsp balsamic vinegar (optional)
dried parsley
paprika
black ground pepper
salt

Rub chicken thighs with salt, black ground pepper and olive oil. Leave it aside.

Preheat oven to 180°C.

Heat pan with butter. Once butter starts to bubbles, Sauté chopped garlic till fragrant. Add mushrooms and carrots. Sauté them till the mushrooms are cooked. Add about 1 tsp of dried parsley and stir for another 30 secs. Set aside on a plate for cooling.

Toss potatoes with dried parsley, parprika, salt and black ground pepper. Seasoned to your own preference. Next, drizzle olive oil generously and toss evenly.

Toss baby corn, zucchini and capsicum with black ground pepper and olive oil. Drizzle balsamic vinegar over the vegetables and toss evenly. Adding balsamic vinegar is optional.

Next, place some stuffing on the chicken thigh and rolled it up. Tie it with kitchen twine to secure the stuffing. Else, probably use toothpicks like I did. Be careful when poking the toothpicks through the chicken.

Lastly, arrange the vegetables(tossed vegetables, onion and garlic) and potatoes nicely around the chicken thighs on a roasting tray. I like the potatoes to be at the outermost edge as they will get slightly burnt on the edges and still soft on the inside. Brush more olive oil on the chicken skin if you want to have crispy skin to munch on.

Place roasting tray into the oven and bake for approximately 30 to 40 minutes. Chicken is cooked when you insert a knife and the juices are clear.

Sounds tedious, but it isn’t really complicated. It’s easier to stuff everything into a whole chicken. I wish I can cook a whole chicken instead but there will be a lot of leftovers for just the 2 of us.

17 Comments »

  wiffy wrote @ April 3rd, 2008 at 8:34 am

looks very delicious and juicy XD I love the roasted look of the vegetables. Blog more!! :)

  Patricia Scarpin wrote @ April 3rd, 2008 at 9:58 pm

My goodness, this looks so delicious!

  paw paw wrote @ April 3rd, 2008 at 10:03 pm

Really very well stuffed but looks lovely.
~~

  tigerfish wrote @ April 3rd, 2008 at 10:13 pm

This looks really good! Love the stuffings. Reminded me of a Teochew braised duck dish, in which the duck is stuffed with chestnuts, carrots, mushrooms….I’m drooling!

  Jessica wrote @ April 4th, 2008 at 4:18 am

That looks delicious!

  didally wrote @ April 7th, 2008 at 11:13 am

wiffy: Try roasting some vegetables, they are lovely to eat.

Patricia: Thanks!

paw paw: When I cut them up, everything falls apart! Haha…

tigerfish: Yum… love braised duck! I’m a Teochew.

Jessica: Thanks. ;)

  ovenhaven wrote @ April 8th, 2008 at 10:05 am

This looks really good! You sure stuffed it well :P And the colour of your potatoes look great; the paprika and parsley combo is a winner!

  didally wrote @ April 9th, 2008 at 3:23 pm

Ovenhaven, roasted potatoes are wonderful, isn’t it? :P

  Camemberu wrote @ April 18th, 2008 at 10:17 pm

hey didally, been wanting to ask you about that mini herb garden…where did you buy the herbs and are they tough to grow in our climate? I would love some fresh basil on demand!

So funny you when you say inhaling Mama Lemon! lol

Great colourful pics of the skewered stuffed chicken, btw. Which camera did you use? :)

  didally wrote @ April 19th, 2008 at 12:20 am

Hi Camemberu,

I love the herby smell of basil in my dishes. I bought them at Vivomart, Vivocity at $3.50 per pot. Both herbs will do alright in our weather, except for the rainy weather where there isn’t much sun, I do see them wither abit. But as long as there is some sunlight, it’s fine. Hope this helps. :)

I’m currently using an old Canon G3 for my home shots. ;)

  Nilmandra wrote @ April 25th, 2008 at 6:12 am

Chicken thighs and drumstick generally take longer to cook compared to breast. I think it has to do with the different density of the meat. Being rolled up and stuff would increase the cooking time too. This dish look really good though and would be perfect for a dinner party. I’m bookmarking this!

  food fan wrote @ April 30th, 2008 at 10:57 pm

woah, actually even w/o the chicken, the stuffing looks good enuf to eat… I’m a newbie at cooking…and I m seriously clueless about where to purchase the herbs u mention..such as parsley and paprika…and advise?

  didally wrote @ May 2nd, 2008 at 12:18 am

Nilmandra: Yes, I gotta pop the thigh back to the oven since it’s all wrapped up and I couldn’t see that the meat was still raw on the inside.

food fan: Yes! The stuffings are nice as a side dish on it’s own. You can purchase these herbs fresh or dried. The fresh ones can be found in the supermarket, vegetables section. The dried bottled herbs can be found in the supermarket too. Take a mini tour in the supermarket, and perhaps can the store assistants to help you locate. ;)

  HN wrote @ June 16th, 2008 at 4:35 pm

Great Idea! Especially for just two of us, an easy one dish meal, thanks for sharing : )

  didally wrote @ July 11th, 2008 at 12:58 pm

Hi HN, no problem. :)

  blackhatguide wrote @ October 13th, 2009 at 6:47 am

Hey, just wanted to let you know that you have a great blog going on here! Keep up the great work mate let me know if you want to partner up with my blog as well! =]

  Singapore Food Photography wrote @ July 12th, 2010 at 12:51 pm

i love the way you made the design look as if its from a cookbook.

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