May 21, 2010 · 17 comments

Mechoui Chicken and Red Onion & Citrus Salad

in Poultry,Preserves,Salad,Sides,Vegetarian

A Taste of Morocco

“I’m really proud of this beautiful dish. I’m not sure what the mechoui man I met in the market in Marrakesh would make of it, but I like to think I’m respecting the way he cooks”

Jamie Oliver (Jamie Does)

If Jamie Oliver is unsure of how his version of Mechoui lamb with carrot and orange salad would go down in Morocco, goodness knows what they’d make of my extremely far removed from tradition version of Mechoui roast chicken wraps, served with harissa yoghurt dip and red onion salad.

Regular readers will know how much I enjoy Moroccan cuisine and how I generally try and stick to traditional methods and ingredients.

Moroccan food is one of the most sensual in the world. It appeals directly and unashamedly to the senses of smell, sight and taste in a way that no other cuisine in my eyes can match. I have yet to travel to Morocco; the closest I have got is Gibraltar, a greatly uninspiring place – too many tourists visiting en masse to shop for cut price drinks, tobacco and whatever else they could find – the one thing that did inspire though once I’d got off the beaten track was the Moroccan influence on the food. I came away with an even greater love of the Moroccan way of eating, the combination of spices and serving fruits with meat. For that reason alone I am glad to have made the trip.

In regard to the mechoui chicken though things took a rather non-traditional route. Mechoui is a North African lamb dish which is frequently prepared in Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria. Each nation has its own specific take on mechoui, so several different dishes are collectively referred to as “mechoui.” Mechoui comes from an Arabic word which means “to roast on a fire,” and traditionally the (whole) lamb is either roasted on a spit or cooked in a pit.

Whole cooking a lamb is certainly out of the question so Jamie adapted the traditional method to make it suitable for home-cooking. I’m sure, should you wish the recipe could be adapted slightly and used for lamb steaks (or other meat of your choice) which could then cooked on a barbecue.

Whatever meat you decide on, don’t forget the mandatory requirement of fiery harissa and cooling yoghurt dips. Harissa paste is widely available at all the major supermarkets now and so getting hold of some shouldn’t be a problem. You could always have a go at making your own though.  My favourite paste is one that my great friend Francesca sends me jars of from Israel.

The only reason I used chicken is because I cooked this as a birthday lunch for my mother, and she requested the chicken. Irritating really as she normally would pick lamb given the choice. Happen I should just have kept my mouth shut and served up a ‘surprise’ meal. Never mind though as the chicken was delightful.

Rather than rub the ground spices directly on the chicken I made a spice butter with them, which I then stuffed under the skin of the chicken and splodged over the top of the bird too. Jamie’s recipe calls for smen (a type of fermented butter) which is not exactly easy to get hold of in rural Staffordshire ;) I had a pot of double cream in the fridge that needed using up so I made the ‘mechoui butter’ from scratch, needless to say you could just use some store bought butter and beat in the spices. A short recipe for the ‘mechoui butter’ can be found at the end of this post, but, if you’d like to know more about how to make butter a post with detailed photographic instructions on how to make butter can be found here.

The chicken ends up incredibly moist, flavoursome and fragrant. The waft of spices and citrus backnotes permeating the house as this cooks is enough to not only whet your appetite but have you salivating at the mere thought of the first mouthful.

In a very lapse moment I forgot to order my carrots for the salad so substituted them for red onions. What a great move that proved to be. Sweet, wafer thin slices of onion in a heady bath of citrus juice, red wine vinegar and superb light but peppery Tunisian olive oil made the perfect accompaniment to the chicken.

Don’t just take my word for it, get cooking.

Mechoui Butter:

  • 250ml double cream
  • 1 heaped teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1 heaped teaspoon ground coriander
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • a small handful of fresh thyme sprigs, leaves picked
  • a few sprigs of fresh rosemary, leaves picked
  1. Put your (room temperature) cream in the free-standing mixer, with the paddle attachment in situ.
  2. Whip the cream on high speed until stiff peaks form.
  3. Reduce the speed of the mixer to medium and continue beating until the cream begins to go yellowish and clumpy.
  4. Reduce the speed to low and keep mixing, after a few minutes you will see the butter forming and buttermilk being extracted.
  5. Remove the butter from the dish and reserve the buttermilk, wash the bowl well and then place the butter back into the bowl. Cover the butter with very cold water and knead well, repeat the process several times or until the water is clear.
  6. Press the butter (using butter pats or wooden spoons) to extract the water before gently kneading in the salt, herbs and spices.
  7. Refrigerate the butter until needed.

Mechoui Chicken:

  • 1 chicken (approx 2-2.5kg)
  • 1 portion of ‘mechoui butter’ (see above)
  • 1 lemon, cut into rough chunks
  • 1 orange, cut into rough chunks
  • 1 bulb garlic cut in half
  1. Preheat the oven to 200C or the equivalent.
  2. Loosen the chicken skin over the breasts and fill with the 2/3 mechoui butter.
  3. Make a trivet for the chicken with the lemon, orange and garlic.
  4. Sit the chicken on the fruit & garlic and then spread the remaining butter over the chicken.
  5. Roast the chicken for 20 minutes per 500g plus 10-20 minutes extra – this will be 1 hour and 50 minutes to 2 hours for a 2.25kg bird.
  6. Once cooked either carve or shred the chicken.
  7. Serve with flat breads, salads and dips.

Red Onion & Citrus Salad:

  • 2 small red onions, peeled and very finely sliced.
  • Juice of 1/2 an orange
  • Extra virgin olive oil
  • Red wine vinegar
  • A small bunch of fresh mint, leaves picked, larger ones torn
  • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
  1. Dress the red onions with the orange juice, a good lug of extra virgin olive oil, a splash of red wine vinegar, the mint leaves and a pinch of salt and pepper
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{ 17 comments… read them below or add one }

arista May 22, 2010 at 13:16

This sounds so delicious – not the sort of thing I would cook for my family unfortunately, but I would love to eat it myself!

Reply

George@CulinaryTravels June 2, 2010 at 15:06

Thank you Arista. Perhaps you’ll have to make a scaled down version for youself?

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Lauren May 24, 2010 at 15:00

What a lovely take on Jamie’s recipe. It looks and sounds fantastic.

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George@CulinaryTravels June 2, 2010 at 15:06

Thank you very much Lauren.

Reply

Christian May 24, 2010 at 16:06

I really like food from morocco, last time in morocco I tried “Lamb or Beef Tagine with Apricots”. Sweet and spicy, delightful savoury combination of dried apricots and meat stewed with saffron, cinnamon, ginger and pepper. Yum, you should try it!

Reply

George@CulinaryTravels June 2, 2010 at 15:07

Thanks Christian. Lamb & apricot tagine is one of my favourites, especially in the cooler weather.

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Collin May 27, 2010 at 06:39

Stunning photos! What lens & camera do you use?

Reply

George@CulinaryTravels June 2, 2010 at 15:07

Thank you Colin. I use a Canon 50D camera and the lens used here was a 60mm macro.

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gloria May 28, 2010 at 02:47

This look really yummy George and beaitiful pictures, Love James Olive rtoo! gloria

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George@CulinaryTravels June 2, 2010 at 15:08

Thank you Gloria :)

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Helen (Fuss Free Flavours) May 30, 2010 at 10:55

That looks amazing!

I made a very fiery lentil harrisa salad the other day as I had underestimated the strength of my new rose harrisa, I nearly always over heat things!
.-= Helen (Fuss Free Flavours)´s last blog ..Review: The Pear Tree, W14 =-.

Reply

George@CulinaryTravels June 2, 2010 at 15:08

Thank you Helen. I love the sound of that salad, will have to head over to your blog soon.

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Megan June 28, 2010 at 09:11

Well, This sounds so delicious – my family would love it.

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Julia July 2, 2010 at 00:05

Crikey. What a feast, it must have taken hours!

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George@CulinaryTravels July 4, 2010 at 10:08

It did take most of the day but it was worth it.

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Tiffany Wheble December 17, 2010 at 14:57

Hi George

The recipe looks delicious! Great photos too :-)

I wonder if you can help me, I am studing ‘marketing across cultures’ at university and we have to choose a country to market Marmite to and I haven chosen Morocco. As someone who loves Moroccan cuisine, do you have any ideas on how Marmite could be used in a Moroccan recipe? Any thoughts or ideas will be greatly appreciated!

Kind regards, Tiffany

Reply

George@CulinaryTravels December 17, 2010 at 15:02

Hi Tiffany, Thanks for your comment – I’ll have a think about Marmite and get back to you asap.

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