When I was a kid, my parents owned a fried chicken restaurant for a
couple of years ("TJ's Fried Chicken"... I don't
know who TJ was, they bought the business with the name). I ate a
little too much chicken during those years. I would go to the
restaurant after school to help out cleaning up and sometimes
taking orders. My after school snack was anything we served in the
restaurant, most of it was fried (chicken, egg rolls, biscuits,
rice...) and as an eleven year old, that was A-Okay with me. But
after a couple of years of after school snacks, I was
"over" chicken... or as my friend PJ might say
"Chicken and I broke up." I do still love fried chicken
on occasion, but generally I have a love-hate relationship with
chicken. So imagine my surprise when I started craving BBQ
chicken. Usually when my stomach wants BBQ, I think of ribs or
pulled pork or maybe brisket. But chicken? I don't crave
chicken. (Well, except for an occasional
perfect roast chicken).
Most of the BBQ chicken that I can remember was just grilled
chicken with a too-thick layer of Kraft BBQ sauce slapped on top as
the chicken was removed from the grill. But my craving was
undeterred... I wanted good barbecue chicken. Could I make
it? Was it possible? Then I picked up the July/August issue of
Martha Stewart's Everyday Food and in its pages found barbecue
chicken complete with a recipe for a classic barbecue sauce.
Kismet? I've already made barbecue chicken twice in the last
week. At the risk of sounding immodest, I have to say that my
barbecue chicken is fantastique.
I started with a whole chicken and cut it into 10 pieces (here is a
helpful video from Chow on how to cut a chicken into 8
pieces. I cut the breasts in half so I got 10). Yes, it would
be easier to buy a chicken already cut up, but it is usually
cheaper to buy a whole chicken, plus you get to keep the back and
other bits to make stock later, so I like buying whole chickens.
(If you choose to buy a chicken already cut up, I would completely
understand. I kind of enjoy it... but then I always liked
dissecting things in anatomy class. If that makes me weird, I can
accept it). I seasoned all of the pieces (skin side and underneath)
with kosher salt and fresh ground pepper. I don't know a ton
about grills. I'm not going to enter into an argument over gas
vs charcoal. I bought a Weber Baby Q about five years ago. I bought
it because everyone I spoke to about grills raved about Weber and
it has a cast iron grill surface... which I love. Anyway,
before I gush too much about my grill let's move on. I turned
the grill on high to get it scorching hot. Brushed it off to remove
any bits from the last round of grilling. Then carefully
with a couple of paper towels wadded up, brushed on some canola oil
(Dan suggested paper towels instead of a brush because it also
cleans it a little while applying the oil). I left the grill to
heat another 2-3 minutes then arranged the chicken on the grill
surface skin side down. I turned the grill down to medium-high,
closed the lid, and set my timer for 10-12 minutes. There was a lot
of sizzling and smoke... a lot of smoke... which was a
little worrisome at first but then I realized that it was just a
part of the process for creating perfect grilled chicken (I got the
general instructions for grilling chicken from Everyday Food
July/August 2009 issue under "Direct Grilling"). When the
timer went off, I flipped the chicken and set the timer again for
about five minutes. At the end of this timer, I brushed the chicken
with about half a cup of barbecue sauce (recipe below) and closed
the grill for another minute or so. At this point the chicken
should be cooked through, but cut through the thickest piece to be
sure. The barbecue sauce should look almost like a glaze... not
just a glob of sauce on top (in my opinion). Forks are optional,
napkins mandatory.
As an accompaniment to the BBQ chicken, I made a corn and avocado
salad. It is super simple and tastes like summer.
Click here for the recipes >>


