How To Make BBQ Chicken?!
How To Make BBQ Chicken?
My friend and I got into an argument. She claims that the only way to make BBQ chicken is to deep fry chicken, then put BBQ sauce on it. I say that that is incorrect, you have to either make it in the oven, or make it on the grill. Could somebody solve this dispute?
Answers:
Deep fry the chicken first, then put sauce on it? It sounds like that stuff they used to serve to you in school. Fried chicken on day one, then "BBQ" chicken the next. I think you are right. I would never make BBQ the way that your friend says to do it. Go to http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/cooking... and you won't see any recipes for the way your friend says to do it.
Barbecued Pulled Chicken For Charcoal Grill
When trimming the fat from the chicken legs, try to leave the excess skin intact, as it will keep the meat moist on the grill. For equipment, you will need four 3-inch wood chunks (we like hickory or mesquite) and a 16 by 12-inch disposable aluminum roasting pan to catch the fat as the chicken cooks. If you would like to hold the dish once the chicken and sauce are combined and heated through, transfer the mixture to a 13 by 9-inch glass baking dish, cover with foil, and place in a 250-degree oven for up to an hour. Serve the pulled chicken with hamburger rolls or sandwich bread, pickles, and coleslaw.
Chicken
8bone-in, skin-on chicken leg quarters (about 7 pounds total), trimmed of backbone and excess fat
Table salt and ground black pepper
Sauce
1large onion , peeled and quartered
1/4cup water
1 1/2cups ketchup
1 1/2cups apple cider
3tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
3tablespoons Dijon mustard
1/4cup molasses
1/2teaspoon ground black pepper
4tablespoons cider vinegar
1tablespoon vegetable oil
2medium cloves garlic , minced or pressed through garlic press (about 2 teaspoons)
1 1/2tablespoons chili powder
1/2teaspoon cayenne pepper
hot pepper sauce , such as Tabasco
1. FOR THE CHICKEN: Soak four 3-inch wood chunks in cold water to cover for 1 hour; drain.
2. Using large chimney starter, ignite about 4 1/2 quarts charcoal, or about 80 individual briquettes, and burn until fully ignited, about 15 minutes. Empty coals into grill; divide coals in half, creating piles on opposite sides of grill. Place 16 by 12-inch disposable aluminum roasting pan in center, between coal piles. Nestle two soaked wood chunks on top of one pile (reserve remaining wood chunks). Position cooking grate over coals, cover grill, and heat until hot, about 5 minutes; scrape grate clean with grill brush.
3. Meanwhile, sprinkle both sides of chicken legs with salt and pepper. Place chicken legs skin side up in single layer on center of grill over roasting pan. Cover and cook 30 minutes (internal grill temperature should register about 325 degrees after 30 minutes).
4. Working quickly to prevent excess heat loss, remove cover, and, using tongs, rotate each leg so that side facing inward now faces coals; do not flip chicken pieces. Add remaining wood chunks to either pile of coals; cover and cook until instant-read thermometer inserted into thickest part of thighs registers about 185 degrees, 30 to 40 minutes longer (internal grill temperature should register about 310 degrees). Transfer chicken to cutting board; let rest until cool enough to handle.
5. FOR THE SAUCE: While chicken is cooking or cooling, process onion and water in food processor fitted with steel blade until pureed and mixture resembles slush, about 30 seconds. Pass mixture through fine-mesh strainer into liquid measuring cup, pressing on solids with rubber spatula; you should have 3/4 cup strained onion puree. Discard solids in strainer.
6. Whisk onion puree, ketchup, apple cider, Worcestershire, mustard, molasses, pepper, and 3 tablespoons cider vinegar together in medium bowl. Heat oil in large nonreactive saucepan over medium heat until shimmering; add garlic, chili powder, and cayenne and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Stir in ketchup mixture; increase heat to medium-high, bring to boil, reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer, uncovered, until flavors meld and sauce is slightly thickened, about 15 minutes. You should have scant 4 cups sauce. Transfer about 2 cups sauce to serving bowl; leave remaining sauce in saucepan.
7. Remove and discard skin from chicken legs. Using fingers, pull meat off bones, separating larger pieces (which should fall off bones easily) from smaller, drier pieces into two equal piles.
8. Place smaller chicken pieces in food processor and pulse until just coarsely chopped, three to four 1-second pulses, stirring chicken with rubber spatula after each pulse. Transfer chicken to sauce in saucepan. Using fingers or two forks, pull larger chicken pieces into long shreds and add to saucepan. Stir in remaining tablespoon cider vinegar; cover saucepan and heat chicken over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until heated through, about 10 minutes. Add hot sauce to taste and serve, passing remaining barbecue sauce separately.
well you can do either or... i boil my fresh chicken till it falls apart drain most all the juice put some bbq sauce and seasoning in it and cook till its hot and serve it that way... and with leftover chicken i will just shredd it and warm it up with the bbq sauce its good anyway you do it