Roast Chicken With Warm Fregola and Butternut Squash Salad Recipe

Two classic autumn dishes come together with fresh herbs and bright lemon zest.

By
Daniel Gritzer
Daniel Gritzer
Editorial Director
Daniel joined the Serious Eats culinary team in 2014 and writes recipes, equipment reviews, articles on cooking techniques. Prior to that he was a food editor at Food & Wine magazine, and the staff writer for Time Out New York's restaurant and bars section.
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Updated May 09, 2024
An overhead look at a portion of roasted chicken next to roasted squash fregola salad with silverware and a blue napkin.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Why It Works

  • Spatchcocking the chicken results in more even cooking.
  • Using the chicken trimmings to make a jus creates a quick and easy sauce.
  • Cutting the squash into small dice allows it to cook through at the higher oven temperature needed for roasting the chicken.

Being a secular type, I have very few rituals in my life. I quit Halloween when I was six, enthusiastically embraced my family's downgrade from "Christmas tree" to "Christmas ficus" as a teen, and told my mom I'd rather go to a fancy restaurant for my 13th birthday than have a bar mitzvah. I believe this mindset might be genetic: My grandfather supposedly used to bellow "CHOW MEIN" at shul when everyone else sang amen, then he'd sneak out to get Chinese food.

In case that confuses you, I'm a half-Jew.

If there's one part of my life in which I do enjoy some semblance of tradition, it's food. And when fall hits, I always greet the season with a roast chicken and roasted butternut squash. I usually also put some sort of starch on the plate, whether it's a simple pasta, risotto, or a grain like farro.

This year, I took an even simpler path, combining the squash and starch into a single warm salad. The starch this time was fregola, a Sardinian pasta that's formed into small balls, similar in shape and size to Israeli couscous. One of the cool things about fregola is that it's also been toasted, with some pieces more browned than others; the toasting gives it a deeper, more complex flavor that works so well with the other autumnal ingredients.

A close-up of toasted fregola.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

If you can't find fregola, don't fret: Israeli couscous or even orzo pasta would work well in its place. You could even lightly toast those pastas yourself on a baking sheet in the oven before boiling, to create an effect similar to that of the fregola.

I cut the butternut squash into fairly small dice, roughly the same size as the fregola, or just slightly larger. This may sound like an unimportant detail, but thoughtful decisions about the size and shape that you cut ingredients have a huge impact on how your food turns out. Sometimes you'll want contrast, with produce cut to different sizes and shapes. Other times, you may want agreement, with everything cut to similar sizes. The important thing is that you consider the effect you want before picking up the knife.

In this case, I preferred a uniformly small size because I didn't want an awkward bite, with large chunks of squash surrounded by little pieces of fregola. It's a small pain in the butt to cut the squash that small, but you can check out our knife skills guide to see how to do it efficiently.

Then I spread the squash on a baking sheet, tossed it with olive oil, salt, and pepper, and roasted it until tender. Normally, you're better off roasting starchy-sweet vegetables, like squash and sweet potato, at lower temperatures, which helps break down the complex carbohydrates into simpler, and sweeter, sugars—a process that doesn't happen as effectively at high heat. In this dish, though, you have to weigh logistics against the absolute best results. Since we're roasting a chicken at higher heat, the most efficient approach is to cook the squash at the same time. But that means not taking advantage of the opportunity to slow-roast the squash. To get the sweetest squash, we'd have to roast it first at a low temperature, then crank up the heat and cook the chicken after.

There's no right or wrong answer here. Personally, I'm more inclined to take the quicker route for a simple, rustic dinner like this one, so that's how I wrote the recipe. But you may see things differently—if so, cook the squash at 325°F (160°C) until tender, then raise the oven temperature for the chicken. In any event, the most important thing, regardless of cooking temperature, is to use a good, ripe butternut squash that feels heavy for its size and sounds hollow when knocked.

Zesting a lemon with a grater over a bowl of fregola and squash.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Once it was roasted, I tossed the squash with the boiled fregola, then dressed it with fresh olive oil. The obvious herb here would be something like sage, but I wanted an unexpected, fresher set of flavors, so I added chopped mint leaves, parsley, scallions, and grated lemon zest.

As for the chicken, I used our preferred method of spatchcocking, then making a jus with its backbone and other trimmings.

It's almost like a prelude to Thanksgiving—a food-centric tradition I can get behind.

Pouring gravy over a roasted chicken leg, next to a helping of roasted squash fregola salad.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

October 2015

Recipe Details

Roast Chicken With Warm Fregola and Butternut Squash Salad Recipe

Prep 10 mins
Cook 15 mins
Active 45 mins
Total 25 mins
Serves 4 servings
Cook Mode (Keep screen awake)

Ingredients

  • 1 recipe butterflied roasted chicken with quick jus
  • 1 pound butternut squash, peeled, seeded, and cut into small dice
  • 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 pound (250g) fregola (about 1 1/4 cups; see note)
  • 3 tablespoons thinly sliced scallions, white and light green parts only
  • 2 tablespoons thinly sliced fresh mint leaves
  • 2 tablespoons minced fresh flat-leaf parsley leaves and tender stems
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons zest from 1/2 lemon

Directions

  1. Place diced squash on a rimmed baking sheet and drizzle with enough oil to lightly coat. Season with salt and pepper. Cook alongside the chicken in a 500°F (260°C) oven until tender, about 15 minutes. Set aside.

    Small-diced squash on a rimmed baking sheet, a hand sprinkling it with salt.

    Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

  2. In a large pot of salted boiling water, cook fregola until al dente, according to package timing. Drain, then transfer to a large mixing bowl.

  3. Add squash to fregola. Toss with 1/4 cup olive oil, scallions, mint, parsley, and lemon zest. Season with salt and pepper. Keep warm.

  4. Serve squash and fregola salad with roasted chicken and jus; drizzle fregola with more oil as needed before serving.

Special Equipment

Rimmed baking sheet

Notes

Fregola is a toasted Sardinian pasta similar in shape and size to Israeli couscous. If you can't find fregola, you can substitute an equal amount of Israeli couscous or orzo pasta; you can even lightly toast the dried pasta first on a baking sheet in a 500°F (260°C) oven for a few minutes (until some of the pieces are lightly browned) to simulate the taste of fregola.

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