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    faqbbq.jpg (10062 bytes)  

    FAQ OF THE INTERNET BBQ LIST

    Version 2.0

    Section 10.3

    Chicken Breasts, Leg Quarters, Wings and Grilling Chicken


    10.3 Chicken

    10.3.1 Breasts

    --------------------

    [Can someone please give me a good method for smoking chicken breasts?]

    Editor—

    Chicken breasts are one of the easiest meats to barbecue. Put them in the hot smoker at 240-250F with light smoke. Breasts with bone and skin will take about 1 1/2 to 2 hours and skinless and boneless will take about an hour. On the boneless breasts, overlap the thinner ends so these do not get over cooked. The secret to perfectly-smoked chicken is to not overcook it. Here is where you need at good meat thermometer. Take the breasts off the smoker when they reach 160F internally.

    Note: smoked chicken will be pink even when it is done. Go by internal temperature, not color, to determine doneness.

    ==============

    Q'n--

    Here is my recipe for smoking spicy chicken breasts.

    Marinate 6 Chicken breasts in refrigerator 24 hours or longer.

    Spicy Chicken Marinade

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    3/4

    cup your favorite barbecue sauce  

    1/2

    cup soy sauce  
        Jalapeno sauce 6 Jalapenos in 1/4 cup vinegar
          blended on liquefy

    Mix ingredients and let the chicken marinate at least 4 hours.

    Smoke at 200F for two hours (cooking time depends on your smoker and thickness of meat). After 2 hours transfer to grill and heat to 350F for 7 minutes turning the chicken at 3 1/2 minutes.

    ===============

    Bill Wight--

    I smoked a batch of chicken breasts using the following method and the family said it was the very best chicken they'd ever had. I used lemon wood in the NBBD. This produced a really flavorful, tender and tasty chicken. We ate the leftovers cold and they were the best cold chicken we'd ever eaten. The meat was still tender and tasty and moist. Brining is the only way to go. The combination of the smoke flavor with the lemon-pepper was outstanding. I used Tones brand of lemon pepper. It has much more dried lemon peel than pepper in it.

    Bill's Lemon-Pepper Smoked Chicken

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method
        MARINADE  

    1

    cup Wishbone Italian dressing  
        RUB  

    8

    tablespoons lemon pepper (Tones brand)  

    2

    tablespoons Willingham's W'HAM regular seasoning  

    2

    teaspoons thyme ground
        MOP  

    1

    cup apple juice  

    1

    cup vegetable oil  

    2

    tablespoons lemon pepper (Tones brand)  

    Recipe makes enough for 6 large chicken breasts.

    Brine the chicken breasts (I used Dan Gill's brine recipe) for 2 hours in the refrigerator. Remove breasts from brine and rinse in cold running water. Pat breasts dry on paper towels. Marinate breasts in the Italian dressing in the refrigerator for 30 minutes. Generously sprinkle on rub on both sides of breasts and under skin if possible. Let breasts sit in refrigerator for 1 hour. Smoke chicken breasts 240-250F with strong to medium flavor wood. Mop every 30 minutes on both sides. Remove from smoker when internal temperature in thickest part of breast reaches 155F, about 2 hours for the largest breasts.

     

    10.3.2 Leg quarters

    --------------------

    [How about a method for smoking chicken leg quarters?]

    Randy Dewberry--

    Fired up the old SWOCS and did some chicken leg quarters. Used about 3 good hickory chunks in the flowerpot (used to contain the wood chunks that produces the smoke) and had smoke before I reached 175F. Marinated the chicken in Balsamic vinegar for 1 hour, then put some of the chicken rub on it from "Smoke and Spice". Smoked the quarters for 2 hours at 210F (next time I am going to try 250F for chicken). Then finished on my gas grill for 15 minutes (shooting for 10 min) just to finish the chicken, wet basting with my sauce. They were as nice a looking barbecue chicken as I have ever seen and these were skinless. Juicy-tender and oh so smoky.

    Fellow SWOCer's, if you haven't tried your SWOCS as a short term smoker and then finish the meat off on the grill, try it. I promise you won't regret it. I used Rick's method of mixing 2 parts honey to 8 parts barbecue sauce for the final grilling. Make sure the honey is as light in color as possible for best flavor, like orange blossom honey. A stronger darker honey will overpower the chicken. Use any barbecue sauce of your choice. The honey gives it some real sticking power and makes a nice glaze.

    (Editor--this technique will work with any smoker, water bullet, off-set firebox--not just a SWOCS.)

     

    10.3.3 Wings

    -------------------

    [Can someone give me a recipe for smoked chicken wings?]

    Don Havranek--

    Don's Brined Hot Wings

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    12

    pounds chicken wings sectioned
        SAUCE:  

    1

    stick butter  

    1

    cup onion minced

    2

    tablespoons garlic, minced sautéed then added

    1

    cup canola oil  

    6

    teaspoons chili powder  

    2

    cups tomato juice  

    1

    28 oz. bottle ketchup  

    1/4

    cup brown sugar  

    1

    8 oz. bottle Sunny Delight OJ  

    2

    teaspoons Liquid Smoke  

    4

    cubes chicken bouillon  

    1/2

    cup dark molasses  

    1

    teaspoons sage  

    2

    teaspoons paprika  

    4

    tablespoons Belligerent Blaze pepper sauce  

    2

    tablespoons Craig's "Hot" pepper sauce  

    4

    tablespoons Worcestershire sauce  

    1

    teaspoon MSG  

    2

    teaspoons black pepper  

    3

    teaspoons balsamic vinegar  

    1

    cup bleu cheese crumbled

    1

    cup bleu cheese dressing  

     

    Don's Poultry Brine

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    1

    gallon water  

    1/4

    cup vinegar (white)  

    1

    tablespoon pickling spice  

    1/2

    teaspoon allspice  

    1

    teaspoon black pepper  

    1

    teaspoon garlic powder  

    1

    teaspoon onion powder  

    1

    teaspoon celery salt  

    1 1/2

    cups salt  

    1/4

    cup brown sugar  

    1

    tablespoon maple extract  

    1

    teaspoon Liquid Smoke  

    To make brine:

    Dissolve the sugar and salt in the cold water. Add spices to the vinegar, bring to a boil and let cool. Add extract and Liquid Smoke to the brine.

    For chicken wings:

    Cut up chicken wings and discard tips or use for stock. Rinse pieces in cold water. Brine wing pieces for 4 hours in above brine solution. Remove wing pieces from brine and rinse in cold water. Pat dry on paper towels.

    Make up sauce and add dressing and bleu cheese. Let sauce cool and pour over wing pieces. Mix well and allow wing pieces to marinate in a covered glass dish for 5-6 hours in refrigerator. Heat marinade to simmering and hold for 30 minutes.

    Prepare smoker and put on wing pieces when grill rack is at 230F. Smoke for about 2 hours, basing with sauce every 30-45 minutes.

    Serve with bleu cheese dressing. Wow these are really good.

    Editor--

    Don's brine recipe can also be used for brining breasts, quarters or whole chickens.

    -------------------

    [I've heard about Bear's Buffalo wings but can't find the recipe. Can somebody help me here?]

    Bear—

    Bear's Buffalo wings

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    1

    gal Texas Pete, Crystal, you know, hot sauce

    2

    sticks butter  

    1/4

    cup fresh ground pepper  

    1/2

    to 3/4 jar Marie's Bleu Cheese dressing  

    40

    pounds chicken wings  
        salt to taste  

    Cut the chicken wings up into the drumette, the middle section and the tip. Discard tips or make into stock. Deep fry the wings until the outside is chewy. You can flour the wings if ya want a lil' crust. Wings should be safely edible at this point. In a pot melt the butter add everything but the bleu cheese dressing. Bring mixture up to a good simmer add the dressing. Cook until cheese lumps dissolve to an even texture (you can still have small bb size or bigger lumps). The addition of more or less dressing will increase or decrease the heat of the wings to a point. If ya want it hotter add some habeneros, it's your life.

    You want to now sauce the wings. You can do this in a Tupperware bowl. Put in some wings and sauce and put on the lid and shake. You can do them by dipping them individually into the sauce with tongs. You can do them in a medium bag, or in a garbage can or garbage bag all at once. You get the idea--coat the wings with sauce.

    The smoker should be going. I also did this for years on the Brinkmann bullet (no water pan, grill on top of the charcoal pan at lowest height). Put in the wings at 200 to 300F and smoke with mesquite wood until sauce it totally adhered to the wings. You can touch them without getting a sauce-covered finger.

    Serve with Bleu cheese dressing (Marie's is the best I've had) for dipping. I don't bother cutting up no damn celery.

     

    10.3.4 Whole chicken

    --------------------

    [How about some tips on doing whole chickens in my smoker?]

    Danny Gaulden--

    Some folks like to smoke them fast, and others slow. I've tried both methods over the years, and I prefer the slow method. I also like to do my chickens in halves, rather than whole. They take on a little more smoke, brown on both sides (which I think looks a lot nicer and they have a better flavor), plus you can apply a finishing sauce to both the outside and inside if you like.

    Here's how I do chicken. Take your whole chicken and remove the giblets and neck from the body cavity. Wash the chicken off in cold water and then cut it in half through the breastbone, dividing the chicken into right and left halves. Pat the halves dry with a paper towel. I apply olive oil or a good cooking oil to both the outside and inside, season with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and lemon pepper. Sometimes I use a little thyme (be careful with this), or poultry seasoning. Place the chicken in a Ziploc bag, and let it sit for about 4 hours in the refrigerator. When you fire up the smoker, bring chickens out of the refrigerator and let them sit at room temperature for as long as 30 minutes--no more. I'm kind of cautious about chicken and bacteria. I smoke my chickens at 225 to 250F and it usually takes about 3 1/12 to 4 hours. When I take my chickens off the smoker using the 'shaking-hands' technique and I measure the internal temperature, it is always between 180-185F.

    After an hour or so of smoking, brush the skin with a little oil, and again after about 2 hours. This helps keep the skin from drying out. Oh, make sure you smoke your chicken skin side up. If you wish to flip it over towards the end of the cooking time, fine.

    I'm very relaxed barbecuing chicken, for an extremely constant temperature is not that critical. Why? Because chicken is not a tough piece of meat; it cooks in a fairly short period of time, so you don't have to worry so much about temperature spikes (for fear of burning the outside, and undercooking the inside) as one would with a brisket or pork butt. I find chicken is a fairly forgiving meat to barbecue.

    When you can shake hands with the drumstick, and it moves freely all the way up into the thigh, it is done. Until you smoke a few and learn how to do this, I recommend that you use a thermometer to check for doneness, but always practice the shake-hands method at the same time. Using a thermometer can be difficult for beginners, for it will not read accurately if inserted next to a bone or cartilage. So be careful and make sure you insert it into the thigh; the last part of the chicken to cook. You can feel a bone if you hit one--no problem--just back off and try again. You'll figure it out after barbecuing a few. I think this is the reason so many people have trouble with chicken, and tend to undercook or overcook them. They just don't know how to tell when they are done. Once you figure this out, it's very easy to barbecue chicken, and your confidence will grow.

    Chickens are cheap, fun to barbecue, and taste pretty darn good too! So practice, practice, practice. Have fun, and let me know how you are doing.

    ==============

    Editor—

    To make really outstanding smoked chicken, brine it first. Use Kent's brine method below or see additional methods in Section 10.5.4. After brining, you can smoke the chicken using Danny's method above or Kent's method below. DO NOT stuff a whole chicken before smoking!

    -------------------

    [Can someone tell me a few competition secrets for doing chicken?]

    Kent Rhodes--

    Brine your chicken. For each gallon of water (enough to cover bird) use 3/4 cup kosher salt, 1/4 to 1/2 cup sugar, some garlic, cumin, pepper, maybe some hot sauce, or any other flavors you like. Let the whole chicken soak for about 8 hours. In your competition schedule, be sure to include enough time for brining and smoking. Wash the chicken off in cold water for about 30 seconds each.

    Turn the chicken over (breast down) and cut through the rib cage. Once cut, place a large knife just inside the breast bone and press down until you hear a crack. Then, turn the chicken back over and press down, this will give you two halves with the skin still intact between the two. Take some Italian dressing and rub it all under the skin. Get you hands real far up there, all the way to the leg bone. Then, rub down with your favorite rub all under the skin also. Smoke-cook as usual, and baste if needed with some more dressing, being sure to lift up skin and baste under there also.

    --------------------

    [What is 'Up the butt' chicken?]

    Editor--Summary of several posts--

    It is a method for smoking whole chickens using a wire rack that goes in the butt cavity and holds the chicken upright during the smoking process. Some barbecuers also use a beer can, either empty or half full of water or beer in place of the wire rack. I saw whole chickens being barbecued with a 'beer can up the butt' at a barbecue competition where the barbecuers smoked the chicken in the horizontal position, breast up. It was delicious. Smoking times will be 3-4 hours at 220-250F. Use Danny's 'shaking hands with the drumstick' method to determine when it's done--internal temperature of 180-185F.

    -------------------

    [Every time I smoke a roaster chicken in my ECB it turns out real nice and tender and juicy the only problem is with the skin. The skin looks real good but when you try and eat it is like rubber. What am I doing wrong? I am smoking it at 220 to 230F according to the candy thermometer I installed at rack level.]

    Ed Pawlowski--

    Roasting a chicken, the crispy skin is the tastiest part. Smoking a chicken, the skin is as you describe it. Two things you can do. Unlike some other meats, chicken does not have to be tenderized so it can be cooked at a higher temperature. That helps. The second is to fire up the grill and after smoking, finish the chicken on the grill. Oh, it also helps to oil the skin before putting it on the smoker.

    10.4 Grilling Chicken

    -------------------

    [Chicken breasts are a favorite in our family when we grill on the gas-fired BBQ grill. Even though I have a 'non-flaring' grill (the kind with adjustable slats), I still have trouble with chicken breasts flaring up when I grill them. When I remove the skin and fat, no flare ups but the breast meat is dry. I've tried removing the fat and leaving all the skin and part of the skin, but nothing makes to chicken taste as good as when I grill it with the fat and skin in place but my wife hates the black from the flaring fire caused by the burning fat. What do the experts have to say about grilling chicken breasts?]

    David Westebbe (EskWIRED)--

    I usually use (gasp) Kraft Barbecue Sauce on chicken breasts. It's got a good old-fashioned (as in "when I was a kid") taste.

    This is how I do it:

    Start the breasts with the skin side up--the coals are too hot at first to put the skin side down. Flip them over after about 15 minutes, and then again after another 15. If the skin is not yet crispy, cook them skin side down some more. You want good, crispy skin. Keep that fire low and don't allow it to flare up.

    When you have good skin, brown and bubbly, paint it THINLY with barbecue sauce. Continue to cook it with the skin up until the sauce dries on. Then flip them over and paint the bottom thinly as well. Cook long enough so that the barbecue sauce burns a little bit, and gets nice and caramelized. This will form a nice surface to really slop the sauce onto, so that lots of it soaks into the burned stuff. Continue cooking (skin/sauce side up) until it dries; it should be thick and sweet and gooey. Paint some more on, so that the breasts are shiny; put them on a platter and serve.

    This may sound complicated, but it's not. Just cook until the skin is crispy. Put on a thin coat of sauce, burn it, and then slop the sauce on. That's all there is to it. Your guests will rave.

    ==============

    Garry Howard--

    I always grill chicken over indirect heat. There is always going to be grease dripping if the skin is still on the chicken and it will invariably flare up if placed directly over the heat source whether it is gas or charcoal. If you can't grill indirectly you just have to keep a close eye on it.

    ==============

    David Gerard--

    As the song goes . . . "Turn, Turn, Turn" No way to get a good crispy skin without the flare. Try turning it over as soon as flare up occurs. Try using lower heat and maybe the edges of your grill surface. Don't bother trying to par boil to remove fat, all the flavor disappears too.

    ==============

    Glenn Manning--

    In my experience, the black which occurs on chicken comes from two sources: (1) grease fire burning from dripping fat and (2) tomato/sugar-based barbecue sauce which blackens quickly. By far the worst of these is the sauce problem. On most grills, at least the ones I have used, it is possible to adjust the heat high enough so that dripping fat from the skin ignites on the ceramic or lava bricks and burns quickly without accumulating to cause a long term blaze. The downside of the higher heat is that the chicken must be watched closely to keep it turned as needed. You did not mention whether or not you use basting sauce and if so what kind. I can guarantee that if you baste with most store bought barbecue sauce during cooking you will end up with burned chicken if you don't watch it constantly. My wife loves chicken basted with sauce as it cooks. I find that with medium high heat and almost constant basting and turning I can get a golden baked covering of sauce without the blackness which occurs from burning.

    ==============

    Dave Gomberg--

    Here is how I grill chicken on a Weber "take-along" grill (the small rectangular one). Get a good charcoal fire going and reduced to gray, then lay the chicken on the grate. Close the vents in the lid but keep the lower vents open. Cook, turning every five minutes for 20 minutes. Should be crispy, but not blackened. If the fire threatens to go out, open the top vent BRIEFLY.

    ==============

    Ed Pawlowski--

    I've been participating in bulletin board and mailing lists for barbecue and grilling for about three years. NO ONE has come up with a method of doing an honest-to-goodness grilling of chicken. Indirect heat, parboiling, water pans, spay bottles, and many other ideas may result in stopping the flare ups, but they are also not grilling. They are methods of cooking chicken on a gas grill. Live with it or buy a Weber.

    ==============

    Bad Penny--

    Cut and de-skin all of the chicken, raw, into slivers, strips, or small cubes. Skewer the pieces onto long bamboo slivers, (that you'll find in big round packages in the oriental section of any good supermarket or go to a Chinese grocery store). Do not pretend this is shishkebab. Anything else you want to cook at the same time, put on separate skewers. Get your wood or charcoal fire going and let die down to HOT coals. Put the skewers of chicken over the coals on the grill, with an inch or two of bamboo skewer hanging over the edge, where you can get at them without burning your fingers.

    These cook fast, so you can serve them as they cook. Turn, turn, turn, turn, until done, add more skewers as done ones come off. As they cook, mop lightly with shoyu, (soy sauce), mixed half-half with water or apple/orange juice. (Actually, what I do is I have the shoyu mixture in a tall jug on the table next the grill, and once or twice, while I'm turning the skewers, I just dunk 'em in the jug). Or make up your own mop using lightly sugared sauces, or just plain Worcestershire and fruit juice. Try cranberry juice by itself. It adds a nice "edge" to chicken.

    These only take five minutes or so, depending on how thick your pieces are.

    This is a way--and the only way that I know of--to grill chicken without either drying out, or having flare-ups. Juicy and tender, and unburnt. No flare-ups.

    ==============

    Author unknown--

    I don't count as an expert, but I can let you know my easy way to do chicken.

    I use a Weber, and bank all the coals on one side. Then keep your chicken cooking indirectly until the last few minutes. When they're done I lay them directly over the hot coals to give them that "grilled" appearance.

    I leave the skin on, but peel it back to season it. Peel the skin back and rub a thin coating of oil, sprinkle with salt, pepper, and some sweat basil. Then fold the skin back over. Place on the rack skin side up (the meatier side). The temperature stays right at 250F and I only turn once or twice. Cooking time is about 1 to 1.5 hours.

    This way takes longer than direct grilling, but I don't have to stand over the chicken turning and spraying every 2 or 3 minutes.

    BTW, I mixed up an unusual sauce that goes pretty good with chicken and pork. Mix 4 parts Worcestershire, 2 parts raspberry preserves, 1 part Polish mustard, dash of Louisiana hot sauce for some bite. It has a strong sweet and spicy flavor, so a small amount will do a large serving of meat.

    ==============

    Dave Lineback--

    Aside from the grammatical difficulties of "BBQ" being used as an adjective to describe a grill, your technical problems can likely be solved by basting and frequent turning.

    I did grilled chicken breasts (with bone in and skin on) last Friday by cooking over very hot charcoal (with pecan and hickory chunks for smoke) without any burning problems. But, they were basted and turned frequently (about every 2-3 minutes). Also, I moved them around on the grill to ensure uniformity of cooking. After 20 minutes of cooking the breasts were perfectly done and as moist throughout as if they had been deep-fat fried.

    ==============

    Frank Boyer--

    To grill large quantities of chicken, I like to cook halves and keep them 18-24" off of the grill. It takes about 1 1/2 to 2 hours to finish but, it is an easy way to do a 4'x8' grill full of halves. The meat needs to be rotated in and out of the fire a couple of times. This gives a golden crispy skin and juicy meat. On my Kingsford grill I put them on and come back in about an hour and a half. They are slightly dark on the bottom but ready for a glaze.

    ==============

    John Mitchell--

    There is a very good Indian chicken recipe that I use on a grill over direct heat that does a terrific job. You grill skinless boneless breasts that have been pounded to uniform thickness. All the fat is removed. The chicken is then marinated in the juice of fresh squeezed limes (2 or 3 limes), with 1/2 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper, 1/2 teaspoon garam masala or a curry powder, 1/4 teaspoon cayenne and two or three cloves of garlic minced fine.

    Let the charcoal settle down with a gray coat. Set the charcoal rack two positions down from the top and lay the breasts on the grill. Flip in three minutes and continue to grill. Flip again for one more minutes heat and transfer to a platter.

    Melt butter and dissolve honey in it at a three part butter to one part honey ratio and dredge the cooked chicken in the mixture. Serve. Pour any remaining honey/butter in a small bowl for dipping at the table.

    I find this very flavorful and yet the breasts don't blacken as all the fat was removed and there are no flare ups. The sugar, honey, is added after the meat is off the fire.

    ==============

    Rock McNelly--

    All right boys, I've waited to see if anybody else was going to suggest this method for cooking up chicken, but it looks like it's up to me. `Tis a sad, sad day, when I have to be the voice of reason.

    I'm going to tell you now, how to cook chicken without ever burning it, and you don't have to keep fussing with it! It aint' grilling, but it doesn't take too much longer to cook it this way, as it does to grill it, and my way will always turn out juicy! Use a Spanek vertical roasting rack. You know, the kind that looks something like a wire-framed flared bell of a trumpet!

    Season the whole bird under the skin. Making sure to get it everywhere. No need for wet marinades or mops. If you want, you can add a couple of pats of butter under the skin and on the chicken breasts.

    Crank the heat up on the smoker to around 300 to 350F (Higher temps = Juicier chicken). Cram the chicken onto the rack being sure that the loose neck and chest skin is tucked in at the top to keep meat from being exposed to the heated air. Place it sitting up in a pie pan, making sure that there is plenty of room between the bottom of the chicken and the pan.

    Place blocks of wood under rack to raise it up about an inch. Reason being is that you want as much air as possible to circulate up through the bird. Then place said pan into your smoker and shut the door and go catch the news or a snooze. Come back in about 45 minutes and add hot fluids to the pan. The reason that you don't add it to begin with is because you want that dry heat flowing through the bird to sear the juices in. The added fluids now are to help with the outer skin. You may if you so choose, baste the bird at this time just to jump start it. I myself don't find it necessary.

    Close the door and come back in about 20 to 30 minutes. Shake hands with that ol' bird to see if it's done! It should be pretty doggone close if it's not. This method takes about a third of the normal time to cook a chicken. If in doubt, whip out your handy dandy thermometer and check the inside temperature at the thigh being careful not to hit a bone (180F is done).

    When that bird's done, it will be as moist and tender as any bird you've ever had! You won't even need a knife to carve that ol' girl up! I remember when I first saw a demonstration of this method, the guy used a carrot to carve the bird!

    I've done a side by side comparison of cooking the bird this way, and while sitting on a half a can of beer. My way cooks faster, and the bird turns out juicier.

    ==============

    Dave Weeks--

    I have been using a fairly large gas grill for several years now. Last year I finally found a technique that produces great chicken on a regular basis.

    I marinade the chicken first, typically in a marinade of chicken bouillon, Italian dressing, apple-cider vinegar and a few spices. I get the grill heated to a medium heat, then I turn off the left burner. I use wood chips (soaked, then wrapped in aluminum foil pierced with a fork) on the right side to produce smoke. I cook the chicken, typically chicken breasts with bone or leg-thigh pieces on the left side, with indirect heat for about 40 minutes. I also spray the chicken frequently with a spray bottle filled with water and a little apple-cider vinegar.

    At the end of the cooking, I turn the right side back up to high, and move the chicken over to that side to put the "grill lines" everyone expects to see. This may not be the "right" way, but it works for me!

    ==============

    Martin Graw--

    Listed below are three chicken recipes for the grill.

    Mardi Gras Grilled Cajun Chicken

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    1

    teaspoon salt  

    1

    teaspoon cayenne pepper  

    1

    teaspoon paprika  

    1/2

    teaspoon white pepper  

    1/2

    teaspoon black pepper  

    1/2

    teaspoon oregano  

    1/4

    teaspoon garlic powder  

    1/4

    teaspoon onion powder  

    1/2

    cup lemon juice  

    1/4

    cup vegetable oil  

    4

    each skinless boneless chicken breast halves  

    Combine dry spices in small bowl. In a shallow glass dish large enough to hold chicken in a single layer, place lemon juice and oil. Add half of spice mix; stir to combine. Add chicken breasts, turning to coat both sides. Marinate 30 to 60 minutes at room temperature or 2 to 3 hours in the refrigerator, covered. Drain chicken from marinade and sprinkle both sides with remaining seasoning mix. Place breasts on hot grill with the thin ends away from the flames. Cook, turning once, until just cooked through, 3 to 8 minutes per side, depending on heat intensity and thickness of meat. Makes 4 servings.

    ==============

    Grilled Tandoori Chicken

    Amount Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    1

    cup yogurt, plain low-fat  

    4

    cloves, garlic minced

    2 to 3

    each Serrano chili peppers seeded and minced

    2

    tablespoons fresh ginger root, grated

    2

    tablespoons lemon juice  

    2

    tablespoons vegetable oil  

    1

    teaspoon ground cumin  

    1/2

    teaspoon salt  

    1/2

    teaspoon ground coriander  

    1/2

    teaspoon ground turmeric  

    1/2

    teaspoon paprika  

    1/2

    teaspoon cayenne pepper  

    1/4

    teaspoon ground cinnamon  

    1/4

    teaspoon ground cloves  

    1/4

    teaspoon ground allspice  

    1/4

    teaspoon black pepper  

    4

    each chicken breast halves skinless boneless

    Combine all ingredients except the chicken in a shallow glass dish large enough to hold the chicken in one layer. Stir well to mix. Add chicken breasts, turning to coat both sides. Marinate, covered, in the refrigerator for 12 to 24 hours. Drain chicken from marinade and place on hot grill with the thin ends away from the flames. Cook, turning once, until just cooked through, 3 to 8 minutes per side, depending on heat intensity and thickness of meat. Do not over cook. Makes 4 servings.

     

    Grilled Chinese Chicken

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    2

    cloves garlic minced

    2

    tablespoons rice wine vinegar  

    2

    tablespoons hoisin sauce  

    1/4

    cup soy sauce  

    1

    teaspoon sesame oil  

    1/2

    teaspoon fresh ginger root, grated  

    1/2

    teaspoon hot chili paste, or crushed red pepper, to taste

    4

    each chicken breast halves skinless, boneless

    Combine all ingredients except the chicken in a shallow glass dish large enough to hold the chicken in one layer. Stir well to mix. Add chicken breasts, turning to coat both sides. Marinate 30 to 60 minutes at room temperature or 1 to 2 hours in the refrigerator, covered. Drain chicken from marinade and place on hot grill with the thin ends away from the flames. Cook, turning once, until just cooked through, 3 to 8 minutes per side, depending on heat intensity and thickness of meat. Makes 4 servings.

    ==============

    Jim Sposato--

    Try grilling the chicken like you always do but have a spray bottle of apple juice to spray the chicken and also keep the chicken (grill) covered during most of the grilling process. I also marinate my chicken breasts in Wishbone Italian Salad Dressing for three hours. No more than 3 hours because the dressing will start breaking down the meat and make it mushy.

    ==============

    Bill Wight--

    While we're on grilled chicken, here is the recipe for some of the best chicken I've ever had. This recipe is from my Pakistani friend's wife Jasmine. They live in Karachi.

    Chicken Tikka

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    2

    pounds chicken legs, thighs or breasts  

    1

    teaspoon salt  

    1

    teaspoon red chili powder  

    1

    teaspoon coriander seeds roasted, ground

    2

    teaspoons garlic minced

    2

    teaspoons ginger fresh, grated

    2

    tablespoons lemon juice or white wine vinegar

    1/2

    teaspoon black pepper freshly ground
      vegetable oil    

    1

    dash red food coloring for traditional color

    Remove the skin and make 2-3 deep cuts in each chicken piece. Roast the coriander seeds in a hot cast iron skillet. After cooling, grind to powder. Mix all dry ingredients with the lemon juice or vinegar and make a paste. Put this paste onto chicken pieces and leave them for at least 4-5 hours to marinate. Better if left in refrigerator over night. Rub each piece of chicken with a few drops of vegetable oil. Grill the chicken using indirect heat over hot coals. Grilled over lemon wood coals with some green lemon wood chips thrown onto the coals makes this chicken even better.

    ===============

    Richard Konkord--

    I grill chicken breasts all the time in the summer and I rarely have any flair ups. I have a typical gas grill with ceramic briquettes. These get really hot and retain the heat.

    Here is what I do. I leave the skin on and pound the breast between plastic wrap so that it is relatively the same thickness throughout. This helps to cook it faster and more evenly. I try to get them about 1/4 - 1/2" thick. I then drizzle olive oil all over both sides and the sprinkle with oregano and black pepper. Believe it or not but the oil actually prevents the skin from burning and turning black. Sometimes instead of oregano I will put sprigs of fresh rosemary on the hot grill and lay the breasts on top of the rosemary. This adds a really nice flavor to the breast. I get the grill really HOT. Before I add the breasts I dip a clean rag (old tea towel) in olive oil and give the grates a quick rub. Just before I add the breasts I turn down the burner to the low setting. Having the grill really hot quickly sears the skin. I leave it on the skin side for about 2-3 minutes and do not attempt to move them. The skin needs to sear and brown. I then turn up the burner to high and flip the breasts to the meat side. I leave the burner on high for about 3 minutes then turn it down to medium for the remainder of the cooking time which is usually for another 4-5 minutes. I have never had flair-ups using this method especially using the olive oil.

    ===============

    Vince Vielhaber--

    Grilled Chicken you ask? We've always used one of two ways. If were being lazy we just marinade the chicken in Italian Dressing, if not we use this:

    Vince's Grilled Chicken Marinade

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    3/4

    cup lemon juice  

    3/4

    cup white vinegar  

    1/2

    cup water  

    1

    cup Crisco oil  

    3

    tablespoons salt  

    1/3

    cup sugar  

    1

    tablespoon Tabasco sauce  

    Marinate chicken overnight and grill. It will flare up and about the only thing to do is either keep a squirt bottle nearby or my preference is to keep the garden hose ready and waiting. For production jobs (cooking for a party) we use two grills, one to start the cooking at a slightly higher heat (most of the flare-ups) and one at a lower heat to finish (very few flare-ups). Use your own judgment on when to switch grills - it should come natural even for novices, for some reason it'll just look like it's time. Makes enough marinade for 2 cut-up chickens.

    -------------------

    [Anybody got a good recipe for grilled chicken wings?]

    Carey Starzinger--

    Famous Kansas Flightless Chicken Wings

    Amount

    Measure Ingredient Preparation Method

    3

    pounds chicken wings  

    1/2

    cup Dijon mustard  

    2

    teaspoon olive oil  

    4

    each cloves garlic minced

    1/4

    cup soy sauce  

    1/2

    teaspoon ground ginger  

    Cut chicken wings into three pieces and discard the tips. Combine other ingredients in a large bowl. Add wing pieces and stir to coat well. Cover and let stand for 45 minutes. Place wing pieces on the grill and brush with remaining mustard mixture. Grill over medium-hot coals about 15-20 minutes, turning once.

    Source: Kansas City Barbeque Society, The Passion of Barbeque