This Lemon Herbes de Provence Baked Chicken is classy and elegant while being easy at the same time. Serve with mashed potatoes and roasted vegetables.
Nothing and I mean NOTHING beats the smell of chicken baking in the oven.
I could curl up with a blanket of that scent and take a nap FOR DAYS!!!
And it’s also no secret that Sunday’s are my favorite day of the week. The girls do their chores, I catch up on laundry and Pat watches football. Sounds pretty boring, but I live for boring.
I always make a Sunday breakfast and then a family dinner. It’s sort of a tradition I started because I use to work weekends and then on the weekends I was off, it was important to me that we have one day where we turn on Pandora and the girls or Pat can help me make breakfast, set the table and enjoy each other’s company. I of course don’t mind all the cooking {the dishes are a different matter} but I love sitting at the table with my family before the busy week begins. And who knows… maybe my girls will pass on this tradition to their families.
But of course that’s never going to happen because they aren’t allowed to grow up. Ever.
For this recipe you’ll need a dry white wine, lemon, shallots, butter, olive oil, Herbes de Provence, s & p, flour and chicken. I’m using bone-in, skin-on chicken quarters, but you could use chicken breasts, thighs and drumsticks or a combination of all three, just as long as there’s a bone and the skin is still left on, that’s where most of the flavor is.
This Lemon Herbes de Provence Baked Chicken recipe is pretty flexible and I like flexible.
Prep the Pan:
I add in three tablespoons of butter and drizzle in a couple tablespoons of olive oil into a stainless steel pan. This is a lasagna pan… but I use it mostly for baking chicken. Now I pop the pan into the oven while it’s preheating to 375 degrees. This will get that butter melted and the pan hot.
Meanwhile; in a bag or gallon size resealable bag add a cup of flour and a couple pinches of black pepper.
Drop in a couple of chicken pieces at a time.
Give it a good shake.
Give the chicken pieces a good shake to get any excess flour off.
Voila!
Arrange the chicken pieces into the pan. Carefully because that pan is hot.
Cut a lemon in half and just drop it in.
Peel and halve a couple, 2-3 shallots and drop those in too.
Herbes or herbs depending how you feel about it, is a mixture of dried herbs like basil, savory, fennel, thyme. And from what I’ve read; for the American market…
…lavender is added. Yeah… I thought that was what put the “Provence” in the “Herbes de”… but apparently it’s not. Either way it’s purple, pretty and rocks it out with the lemon.
Sprinkle a few pinches per chicken quarter with Herbes de Provence, kosher salt and a little more black pepper.
Pour in the quarter cup of white wine. I.e. Pinot Grigio.
Then slide this pan into your awaiting oven for 20 minutes.
After the first twenty are up, carefully remove the chicken from the oven, tip the pan and use a spoon to scoop up the wine infuse drippings and spoon it over top of the chicken. Return the pan to the oven for twenty more minutes.
Repeat this step a second time before sliding the chicken in for its last twenty minutes in the oven. {total of 60 minutes}
I must take a moment and explain how utterly amazing the scent is that wafts from the oven while this is baking. Throughout the basting I’d walk over to Pat and say “ohhhhh just smell that… go on S-M-E-L-L it!”… I’m so lucky he loves me.
In my oven I have to start with the pan on the lower third of my oven and then move it to the upper third to brown and crisp the skin. I have the world tiniest oven… and you may not have to do this. Unless you’re in the same tiny oven boat as me :).
That’s it! Lemon Herbes de Provence Baked Chicken!
I was running out of sunlight to show you how to do the pan sauce gravy but I’ve included the recipe below. It’s pretty simple and so delicious!
The skin crisps, the lemon herbes de provence baked chicken is moist and the gravy adds so much flavor from the roasted lemon and Herbes de Provence. It was the perfect cozy meal for a Sunday… or any night for that matter.
Ps. Crispy skin, I love you.
Enjoy! And if you give this Lemon Herbes de Provence Baked Chicken recipe a try, let me know! Snap a photo and tag me on twitter or instagram!
Lemon Herbes de Provence Baked Chicken
Ingredients
FOR THE BAKED CHICKEN:
- 4 bone-in skin-on chicken quarters, or a combination of thighs and drumsticks
- 1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
- fine salt, to taste
- freshly ground black pepper, to taste
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 3 tablespoons butter
- 1 tablespoon Herbes de Provence
- 1 whole lemon, halved
- 2 medium shallots, peeled and halved lengthwise
- 1/4 cup dry white wine
FOR THE GRAVY:
- 2 tablespoons fat drippings from pan
- 1 cup pan juices
- 1 cup chicken broth
- juice from the roasted lemons
- Herbes de Provence, to taste
Instructions
MAKE THE BAKED CHICKEN:
- Drizzle two tablespoons of olive oil into a roasting pan and add in three tablespoons of butter. Preheat your oven to 37°5 and slide the roasting pan into the oven while it preheats.
- Meanwhile, in a bag {or re-sealable gallon size bag} add in the cup of all purpose flour and a couple pinches of coarse-ground black pepper. Close off the bag and shake to combine.
- Drop in two leg quarters, close the bag and shake to coat the chicken. Remove each leg quarter, one at a time, and shake off any excess flour. Repeat with the remaining chicken pieces.
- Once the oven is preheated, carefully remove the roasting pan. Place each flour-coated chicken piece into the roasting pan. Add in the peeled, halved shallots, the lemon halves and pour in 1/4 cup of dry white wine into the pan. Sprinkle each chicken piece with a couple of pinches of Herbes de Provence, kosher salt and a little more black pepper.
- Return the roasting pan to the lower third of your oven for twenty minutes. After the first twenty are up, carefully remove the chicken from the oven, tip the pan and use a spoon to scoop up the wine infuse drippings and spoon it over top of the chicken. Return the pan to the oven for twenty more minutes.
- Remove once more, spoon more of the pan drippings over the top of the chicken and return the pan to the top third of your oven and bake for 15-20 minutes more or until the skin is crispy and golden brown.
MAKE THE GRAVY:
- Remove the chicken to a platter and pour the pan drippings into a two-cup liquid measuring cup.
- Once the juices settle and the fat rises, skim two tablespoons of fat and add it to a sauce pan. Skim the remaining fat off the top and discard, this should leave about 1 cup (or more) of juices behind. Pour in 1 cup {or equivalent} of chicken broth to the pan juices until it equals two cups.
- In the small saucepan with the two tablespoons of fat, add in two tablespoons of all purpose flour. Whisk constantly for 1 to 2 minutes before pouring in the 2 cups of chicken juices/broth. Squeeze in one half of the roasted lemons, a 1/2 teaspoon of Herbes de Provence and season with kosher salt and black pepper to taste.
- Let the gravy bubble while you whisk until it thickens.
- Serve baked chicken with a spoonful or two of gravy.
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THANK YOU in advance for your support!
Looks delicious and cozy, perfect this time of year!
I’ve never seen a more beautiful recipe!!!
Thank ya Liz! It’s so easy but so fancy 🙂
I love a good recipe for crsipy-skinned roasted chicken. This recipe looks perfect!
Thanks Jennie! It’s alllll about the crispy skin!
I looooove “boring” catch-up and relax days. This chicken looks absolutely perfect – one of my very favourite things.
Your chicken turned out beautifully, and I love the light in your kitchen! Absolutely lovely!
Thanks Pamela! I have these two huge corner windows… which can be tricky at times so I appreciate you comment!
This is stunning! You can cook a mean chicken, Laurie!!
This sounds (and looks) amazing!!!
Thanks Rachel!
Gorgeous, my friend. So elegant! I love these flavors.
You are too kind! Xo
Jeez!! you can cook a gorgeous chicken girl!! This looks awesome!
This chicken looks AMAZING. I want a big helping right now!
Hello,
Quick Question, what does the Flour do for the Baked Chicken? I’ve never heard of anyone adding Flour to their baked chicken , please let me know thanks!
Hi Shazia, this is something my mother has always done. I believe it just coats the chicken enough so that when you baste it, it helps crisp the chicken skin 🙂
I reeeeealllly need to start roasting chicken more often rather than spend money on lame air refresheners, ahaha. This chicken looks insane! Love the tip about melting the butter in the pan beforehand. Easy peasy!
PS, I live for boring days, too! Makes me feel happy and warm 🙂
This looks so appetizing-you did a great job with your cooking and photography! With just adding 1/4 cup wine, does the chicken produce enough liquid during baking to make the 1 cup pan drippings that the recipe calls for?
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I tried this out tonight and it was delicious! Thanks so much!
I’m so glad Rana! Thanks for coming back and letting me know 🙂
Hello,
I JUST tried this recipe. And while it looks good on the blog, I am not so pleased. #1, the flour coating caused the skin to slide completely away from chicken when cutting into it. #2, I found that the skin of the chicken held great flavor, but the meat of the chicken lacked in the same consistency of flavor and as a result, the meat of the chicken was very bland. #3 the flour coating did not work out so well underneath the chicken as it cooked it the pan. The skin underneath the chicken came out as clumps of very wet flour. All in all, I would say, alleviate the flour-it did more harm than good.
Hi Victouria, I’m sorry to hear about this recipe not working for you. Flouring chicken is how my mother has done it for years and I can’t imagine it being the cause to your disappointment. Even though I wasn’t in the kitchen with you to see what went wrong and where, I’d like to help address some of the issues you’ve mentioned in regards to this recipe. 1.The chicken skin slipping can happen, too much fat under the skin that doesn’t render or a dull knife. I’ve had that happen and I’m not certain of a fool-proof way to avoid it every time. 2. Bland chicken, the skin is ultimately what flavors chicken. If it was skinless you could rub the chicken down with spices or marinate, but even a marinade doesn’t penetrate the meat like it would beef. Maybe try slipping some of the herbs underneath the skin next time? Also,I’m not sure if you made the pan gravy but that would’ve helped to add even more flavor to you chicken. 3. There shouldn’t have been clumps of flour under your chicken. It sounds to me that not enough flour was shaken off before baking. The chicken should only have a light coat of flour and it isn’t meant to act as a breading of any kind. I also preheat the oil/butter in my stainless roasting pan in the oven so when the chicken hits it it starts to sear, starting the chicken in the bottom of the oven could help with that too and then moving it to the middle at some point to crisp the skin. I hope this helps, thanks for stopping by! 🙂
I made this a few nights ago and I have to say….it was AHHHHH…MAZING!
This recipe is my new “all time” fav. Don’t agree with Victoria’s comment…but I agree with you…the pan gravy is delicious and adds the finishing touch.
Oh..and one more thing. Any chicken…except for brined …loses some of its flavor once the first layer …be it the skin or top portion…is eaten. Sometimes the chicken is overcooked too and looses its natural cooked juices. But I didn’t experience blandness with this recipe.
I want to make this dish. Chicken is my favorite food. I can’t wait to make this dish. Thank You
I am making this right now and my whole house smells amazing. I’ll keep you posted on how it all turns out, but if the aroma is any indication as to the taste……….it will be a huge hit with our family.
Oooh enjoy!!
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Thank you so much for the wonderful recipe, we absolutely loved it!
Hi , I would just like to tell you that this recipe is amazing!
I have made this three times and it never fails!
Thank you for sharing this with us.
This looks great and I am definitely going to try it. But I have heard horror stories from a friend about getting food poisoning from using grocery bags for food prep. Be careful!
I made this tonight along with your easy rice pilaf and baked broccoli. Everything was so easy to make and delicious. THANK YOU! I use a lot of your recipes, you’re my go to girl if you will. I have shared this website w/coworkers b/c I th ink (and my family thinks) you’re ahhh-amazing.
I’m not a commenter usually, but I have to applaud this recipe. It’s easy and delicious af! And I can’t leave out the bonuses of gravy and hardly any cleanup! Btw, I don’t get the need for the plastic bag. I used a bowl and it was just fine. Thanks again! This was one of my pandemic go-tos and it always makes my mouth water to plan it.