Equipment
Ingredients
Chicken & Marinade
- 4 bone-in skin-on chicken thighs, trimmed of excess fat
- 15 ml olive oil
- 8 g kosher salt
- 2 g black pepper, freshly ground
Fruit & Aromatics
- 1 orange, zested and juiced
- 2 firm pears, cored and sliced into thick wedges
- 6 fresh figs, halved longitudinally
- 4 garlic, peeled and gently smashed
- 30 ml honey
- 5 g fresh thyme, left on the sprig
Nutrition (per serving)
Method
Preheat your oven to 200 C (400 F). Pat the chicken thighs completely dry with paper towels to ensure crispy skin, and practice good food safety by washing hands and avoiding cross-contamination with the raw poultry.
Season the dried chicken thighs thoroughly on both sides with the kosher salt, black pepper, and fresh orange zest.
Heat the olive oil in a large oven-proof skillet over medium heat. Place the chicken thighs skin-side down and sear undisturbed for 8 to 10 minutes until the fat renders and the skin turns a deep golden brown. Flip the chicken and sear the meat side for 2 minutes, then transfer the thighs to a resting plate.
Drain all but 15ml of the rendered chicken fat from the skillet. Return the pan to medium heat, add the smashed garlic cloves and pear wedges. Sauté for 3 minutes until the pears begin to take on a golden color at the edges.
Pour the orange juice and honey into the hot skillet, scraping the bottom with a wooden spoon to release any browned savory bits. Nestle the seared chicken thighs skin-side up back into the skillet. Tuck the fresh fig halves and thyme sprigs around the chicken.
Transfer the entire skillet to the preheated oven. Roast for 15 to 20 minutes until the fruit is tender, the pan juices are bubbling and syrupy, and the chicken registers an internal temperature of 74 C (165 F) on a meat thermometer.
Remove the skillet from the oven and let the dish rest for 5 minutes before serving to allow the juices to redistribute within the chicken.
Chef's Notes
- Starting chicken thighs in a cold or moderately warm pan rather than a smoking hot one gives the subcutaneous fat more time to render out gently, resulting in a much thinner, crispier skin.
- Bosc and Anjou pears are the culinary gold standards for roasting because their flesh remains structurally sound even as the natural sugars caramelize under high heat.
- If your fresh figs are exceptionally soft, withhold them from the pan until the final 5 minutes of roasting so they warm through without disintegrating entirely.
- The combination of acidic orange juice and sweet honey requires close monitoring in the oven; if the sugars begin to scorch before the chicken is fully cooked, add a tablespoon of water to the pan to slow the caramelization.
Storage
Refrigerator: 3 days — Store in an airtight container. Fruit may soften further upon storing.
Reheating: Reheat gently in a 175 C oven until warmed through to preserve skin texture.










