The single biggest unlock for weeknight chicken thighs: leave them alone. The cooking happens to the chicken, not because of you. Place skin-side down in a hot pan, walk away for eight minutes, and the difference between sad chicken and crispy chicken is just patience.
Heat the oven to 425°F (220°C) with a rack in the upper-middle position.
2
Sprinkle the salt, pepper, and smoked paprika over the chicken on both sides. Press the seasoning into the skin. Let the thighs sit while the pan heats — this dry brining helps the skin crisp.
3
Heat the oil in the skillet over medium-high until it shimmers. Working in two batches if needed, place the thighs skin-side down. Don't move them. The skin needs 7 to 9 minutes of undisturbed contact to release on its own — if it sticks, it isn't ready. Listen for the sizzle; if it quiets, the heat is too low.
4
Flip the thighs. Nestle the lemon halves cut-side down and the garlic halves cut-side down into the pan. Tuck the thyme and rosemary in the spaces between.
5
Pour the chicken stock around (not over) the thighs. Slide the whole pan into the oven and roast for 18 to 22 minutes, until a thermometer inserted at the bone reads 175°F (80°C) — yes, thighs are best at 175, not 165.
6
Transfer the thighs to a platter and rest 5 minutes. The skin should be deep amber and the lemons should be jammy.
7
Place the skillet over medium heat. Squeeze the roasted lemon halves into the pan and discard. Swirl the cold butter into the juices if you're using it — this is a glossier sauce. Taste, adjust salt, and pour the pan sauce over the chicken.
Cook's notes
Don't crowd the pan. Chicken thighs render a lot of fat. Crowded skin steams instead of crisps. Two batches over twelve minutes beats one cramped batch over twenty.
175 is the move. The collagen in the dark meat doesn't break down at 165 and you'll think you don't like thighs. You like thighs — you've been cooking them ten degrees too low.
Pair it with. A pile of buttery rice, a pot of beans cooked in the leftover pan sauce, or smashed potatoes finished in the chicken fat.
Make-ahead & storage
Salt and dry-brine the chicken up to 24 hours ahead, uncovered on a rack in the fridge. The skin gets noticeably crispier overnight. Bring to room temperature 20 minutes before searing.
Storage
Refrigerated cooked thighs keep 3 days. The pan sauce keeps separately for the same window; rewarm gently over low heat with a teaspoon of stock or water.
Reheating
For crispy-skin reheat: 375°F oven for 10 minutes on a wire rack. Microwave makes the skin rubbery; skip it. Or shred the cold meat into a salad — great on greens with the cold pan sauce as the dressing base.
Source
Years of weeknight chicken thighs, distilled. Most heavily indebted to Samin Nosrat's salt-acid-fat lessons.
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 4 (2 thighs)
Amount per serving
Calories480
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 32g
41%
Saturated Fat 9g
45%
Cholesterol 230mg
77%
Sodium 780mg
34%
Total Carbohydrate 4g
1%
Dietary Fiber 1g
4%
Protein 42g
Iron 2.6mg
14%
Potassium 560mg
12%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
Estimated values. Actual nutrition varies with substitutions, brands, and exact yields.
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