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by Mary Berry

A roast chicken seems to me to be the ultimate comfort meal for all the family. And it鈥檚 so versatile: serve as a classic Sunday dinner with roast potatoes, or with a selection of salads or side dishes.

Main course

Buyer's guide

The plight of the cheap chicken has been much publicised and as such the consumer now has more choice than ever. Value chickens for well under a fiver, free-range, organic, corn fed - there's a cornucopia of options. Budget, ethics and taste all come into the equation but what almost all chefs, cooks and food writers agree on is that a good-quality, free-range bird is vastly superior in flavour to a cheap factory-farmed bird.

Storage

A whole chicken can be frozen for up to 9 months if well-wrapped to stop any air getting in. Defrost the chicken in the fridge (it can take around 2 days), then allow it to stand uncovered out of the fridge for no more than half an hour before cooking.

Preparation

A large chicken (around 1.5kg/3lbs 5oz) will feed a family of four with leftovers for a salad or pasta dish the next day. A stock can be made from the carcass and turned into a risotto or broth on the third night. It's often considerably cheaper to buy a whole chicken and joint it yourself, than to buy ready-prepared breasts and leg joints. Whole chickens tend to be sold trussed (tied with string) - remove this and pull the legs gently away from the body to ensure even cooking. Sprinkling the skin with sea salt before roasting will help to crisp it up. Leave it to rest for 10 minutes after cooking, and before carving, and you'll be rewarded with a pool of flavoursome pan juices that can be served as they are, or thickened with a little flour and stretched with a splash of wine or stock for gravy.