sheet pan chickentikka

June 2024 · 7 minute read

In the game of weeknight cooking — which I feel, at best, is rigged and not in our favor especially if you (or you and your partner) are out working all day — our allies are as follows:

  • Children, should you have them, happy to eat dinner at 8/9 p.m. on a weekday. (Let me know where to find them.)
  • Prepping and planning meals over the weekend so everything is mostly ready to go when you get home from work. (Requires a desire to spend any part of the weekend prepping meals, which I, regrettably, do not.)
  • Mastering the slow-cooker, so your dinner is ready when you get home.
  • Mastering the pressure-cooker, so long cooking times can be reduced to smidgens.
  • Contentment with quick simple meals (scrambled egg toasts, frozen tortellini, sandwiches) and/or a deep arsenal of great recipes that come together quickly.
  • Meal delivery services, which take the recipe-selection, shopping and prep work out of cooking, making it go faster.
  • what you'll mostly need
    yogurt and spice

    And so, with this, I am announcing that I’m leaving my job here at Smitten Kitchen LLC to go work for a meal delivery start-up. All the best food writers are doing it! I kid, I kid.

    cauliflower florets

    In fact, I wanted to talk about something that can fit nicely into the fifth item: sheet pan dinners, because I’m rather taken with them these days. It shouldn’t be a radical concept — everything on a sheet pan, into the oven, roasted at once — but I think in these days of restaurant chef-driven home cooking, subrecipes and cooking with multiple components has become more the norm than it should. The holy grail of the single-tray category I’d say is the 2014 Sheet Pan Suppers cookbook from Molly Gilbert, a paean to maximum ease, minimal cleanup and flavor intensification of roasting and broiling. Another great solo act in this category is Melissa Clark’s Roasted Chicken with Potatoes, Arugula and Garlic Yogurt as charming for its flavors and textures as it is for the stop-you-in-your-tracks stunning work of Andrew Scriviani’s camera.

    ready for the oven
    from the oven

    But all I’ve ever wanted to add to this lot is a riff on an Indian-spiced chicken that favors roasting over a saucy braise. The chicken tikka you see in restaurants is, in the words of Meera Sodha, “so luminously orange you could see it from space.” Fortunately, in her excellent Made In India cookbook — a collection of recipes aimed at dispelling the myth that Indian food is intimidating or complicated, intended for first-timers and/or seasoned cooks, using no wild goose chase ingredients, which means if I could stamp it with the praise hands emoji, I would — Sodha shares her family recipe. But, because I’m a heretic, or someone who at best inauthentically dabbles in Indian cooking, I didn’t want my tikka on skewers as it’s usually presented, but with some aloo gobi (cauliflower and potatoes) in there for more of a meat-and-potatoes type meal. The results were so good, half the vegetables didn’t make it to the dinner table because my husband and I kept plucking away at them.

    sheet pan chicken tikka

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    Sheet Pan Chicken Tikka
    Chicken marinade adapted from Made In India

    Notes:

    Serves 4

    For the chicken
    1 3/4-inch piece of ginger, peeled and minced (see Note up top)
    4 cloves of garlic, minced or pressed
    1 fresh green chili (I used a jalapeno), seeded and minced
    1/2 cup whole-milk yogurt
    1 teaspoon kosher salt
    1/2 teaspoon chili powder or cayenne, or adjusted to taste (I used 1/4 teaspoon)
    1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
    1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
    3/4 teaspoon granulated sugar
    1 teaspoon paprika
    1 teaspoon garam masala
    2 pounds chicken thighs, drumsticks or halved chicken breasts (all skin-on, bone-in)

    For the vegetables
    3 tablespoons olive oil
    1 1/4 pounds (about 4 medium) Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled if desired, cut into 3/4-inch chunks
    1 3/4 pounds (1 small or half a very large head) cauliflower, cut into 3/4-inch-wide florets
    1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
    1/2 teaspoon cumin seeds

    To finish, if desired
    A few thin slices of red onion
    Lemon wedges
    Salt
    Dollops of yogurt
    A few tablespoons roughly chopped cilantro, parsley or mint, or a mix therof

    Combine ginger, garlic, fresh chili, yogurt, salt, spices and sugar in a freezer bag, bowl or container. Add chicken pieces and toss to coat evenly. Let marinate for 15 minutes or up to a day in the fridge.

    When you’re ready to cook the dish, heat your oven to 425°F. Line a half-sheet (13×18-inch) with foil and coat it with 1 tablespoon of the olive oil. Add potatoes, cauliflower, salt, cumin and remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil and toss together with you hands until evenly coated.

    Remove chicken from marinade and leave excess behind. Make spaces in the vegetables for chicken parts throughout the pan. Roast in oven for 20 minutes, then toss the potato and cauliflower to ensure they’re cooking evenly, and return the pan to the oven for 10 to 20 minutes more (i.e. 30 to 40 minutes total roasting time), until chicken and vegetables are cooked through.

    While it roasts, if you’d like to use the lightly pickled onion rings that we did on top, which added a nice tangy fresh zip to the dish, separate the rings and toss them in a small bowl with a squeeze of lemon juice and a pinch of salt. Set aside until needed.

    When chicken and vegetables are cooked, top with garnishes of your choice — we used dollops of yogurt, herbs and scattered the above onion rings all over. Serve right in the pan.

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