Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use a meat thermometer. I upped my meat game significantly when I started using one.
+1
Use a instant read meat thermometer. I realized that I wasn't sure if chicken was fully cooked so I usually ended up over cooking it and it turned out dry. Chicken needs to be cooked to 165 deg F, but you have to account for residual cooking (carryover cooking) once you take the chicken out of the oven. I usually take chicken out at 160 and leave it untouched for a little bit with foil on top
Thanks I took it out last night when the last piece was over 165 on the thermometer. Does that mean all the pink is gone? While one piece was 165 there was another that was 190s. What can I do about that? - op
NP. Can you figure out why the pieces did not cook evenly? It sounds like that is part of the problem, the piece that cooked to 190+ will almost certainly be overcooked and dry. Perhaps some of the chicken was cooked more in the pan before going into the oven? Different thicknesses? You mentioned overlapping the chicken in the pan - did the edge pieces cook faster? (If I need to overlap, I usually try to overlap around the edges, leaving the center single-layer so that the edges don't overcook before the center is done). Or your oven may have a hot spot - in mine, the back of the oven is hotter, so I rotate the pan halfway through or put the thicker pieces toward the back.
If you can solve that problem, it should help. If you can, check the temp of each piece after about 2/3 of the cooking time. If it seems like some pieces are heating faster than others, try rotating your pan in the oven, or be ready to pull some of the chicken out of the pan while the rest finishes cooking.
Anonymous wrote:Use vegetarian chicken (like Beyond meat) and you can eat it as well. I'm vegetarian and don't cook meat for my family. If they want to eat meat, they have to cook themselves (or go to a restaurant).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use a meat thermometer. I upped my meat game significantly when I started using one.
+1
Use a instant read meat thermometer. I realized that I wasn't sure if chicken was fully cooked so I usually ended up over cooking it and it turned out dry. Chicken needs to be cooked to 165 deg F, but you have to account for residual cooking (carryover cooking) once you take the chicken out of the oven. I usually take chicken out at 160 and leave it untouched for a little bit with foil on top
Thanks I took it out last night when the last piece was over 165 on the thermometer. Does that mean all the pink is gone? While one piece was 165 there was another that was 190s. What can I do about that? - op
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use a meat thermometer. I upped my meat game significantly when I started using one.
+1
Use a instant read meat thermometer. I realized that I wasn't sure if chicken was fully cooked so I usually ended up over cooking it and it turned out dry. Chicken needs to be cooked to 165 deg F, but you have to account for residual cooking (carryover cooking) once you take the chicken out of the oven. I usually take chicken out at 160 and leave it untouched for a little bit with foil on top
Thanks I took it out last night when the last piece was over 165 on the thermometer. Does that mean all the pink is gone? While one piece was 165 there was another that was 190s. What can I do about that? - op
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use a meat thermometer. I upped my meat game significantly when I started using one.
+1
Use a instant read meat thermometer. I realized that I wasn't sure if chicken was fully cooked so I usually ended up over cooking it and it turned out dry. Chicken needs to be cooked to 165 deg F, but you have to account for residual cooking (carryover cooking) once you take the chicken out of the oven. I usually take chicken out at 160 and leave it untouched for a little bit with foil on top
Anonymous wrote:Use a meat thermometer. I upped my meat game significantly when I started using one.
Did you post in the right thread? The OP's asked for tips on cooking chicken, not if she should or should not.Anonymous wrote:Use vegetarian chicken (like Beyond meat) and you can eat it as well. I'm vegetarian and don't cook meat for my family. If they want to eat meat, they have to cook themselves (or go to a restaurant).
Anonymous wrote:I know this isn't what you asked but---Ask your husband to make itSeriously--just cook what you know and if he wants meat he can make it himself.
Aside from that---chicken thighs are sooo much better than breast.
Seriously--just cook what you know and if he wants meat he can make it himself.