Sly-one
Full Fledged Farker
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2011
- Location
- Nocatee, Fl
I ordered the Oakridge BBQ sample pack and it arrived today. Hmmm, what to do with some of this stuff? Whole chickens were on sale for .99 a pound, and I recently picked up a couple of BCC racks, so naturally, beer can chicken got the nod. I removed the giblets, washed off the chicken, patted it dry, spritzed it with olive oil and added the Oakridge Game Bird and Chicken rub. I put it on the UDS and had to use a "tall" lid we made and let the temp climb up into the 330-355 range.
I read in a tutorial for spatchcocked chicken to pull it when the breast hits 155 and the thigh gets to 165 and let it sit for 10-15 minutes, so that's what I did. The skin was a touch rubbery but had fantastic flavor, so after eating, I tossed the other bird and the half bird we didn't eat back onto the UDS.
My lawn mower is broken so a friend drove his Dixie Chopper over (sweet!). What normally takes me over an hour to mow took him only 30 minutes on his DC, which as it turns out, was just the right amount of time to finish the chickens. The skin got just right and the meat stayed moist.
My neighbor had told me that on his way over, when he turned the corner, he could smell the chicken cooking, so I sent the second bird home with him wrapped in foil in an aluminum pan. He stuck it between his feet and took off like a wide receiver running for the goal line. Nobody was going to stop him or get that chicken away from him.
Moral of the story? When you need your lawn mowed, season up some chicken and throw it on the smoker!
Here are two old biddies having a chat.
I read in a tutorial for spatchcocked chicken to pull it when the breast hits 155 and the thigh gets to 165 and let it sit for 10-15 minutes, so that's what I did. The skin was a touch rubbery but had fantastic flavor, so after eating, I tossed the other bird and the half bird we didn't eat back onto the UDS.
My lawn mower is broken so a friend drove his Dixie Chopper over (sweet!). What normally takes me over an hour to mow took him only 30 minutes on his DC, which as it turns out, was just the right amount of time to finish the chickens. The skin got just right and the meat stayed moist.
My neighbor had told me that on his way over, when he turned the corner, he could smell the chicken cooking, so I sent the second bird home with him wrapped in foil in an aluminum pan. He stuck it between his feet and took off like a wide receiver running for the goal line. Nobody was going to stop him or get that chicken away from him.
Moral of the story? When you need your lawn mowed, season up some chicken and throw it on the smoker!
Here are two old biddies having a chat.