Good Old American Grilled Chicken

Latest Review: "I don't understand all of the negative c ...more"

Provided by Steven Raichlen

  • Saved by 660 people
  • Viewed 27855 Times
  • Shared 373 Times
  • Prep:
  • Cook:
  • Ready in:
  • Serves:

Ingredients

  • 2 Chickens (3 1/2 to 4 pounds each)
  • 3 tablespoons Basic Barbecue Rub, or your favorite commercial brand
  • 1 1/2 cups Basic Barbecue Mop Sauce
  • 2 cups Basic Barbecue Sauce

Cooking Instructions

Remove the packets of giblets in the body cavities of the chickens and set aside for another use. Remove and discard the fat just inside the body and neck cavities. Rinse the chickens, inside and out, under cold running water and then drain and blot dry, inside and out, using paper towels. Cut the chickens in half lengthwise. Arrange the chicken halves in a baking dish and sprinkle on both sides with the rub. Pat the rub onto the chickens with your fingertips. Let the chickens sit in the refrigerator, covered for as little as 15 minutes or as long as 4 hours; the longer they stand, the richer the flavor will be.

Set up the grill for direct grilling and preheat to medium. When ready to cook, brush and oil the grill grate. Arrange the chicken halves on the hot grate, all facing in the same direction, skin-side down. Baste the birds with mop sauce every five minutes or so. It is likely the melting fat from the skin will cause flare-ups. Move the chicken halves away from the flames to keep them from burning.

After 10 to 12 minutes, the skin side of the chickens should be crisp and golden brown. Turn the chicken halves, apply more mop sauce and grill the bone side of the chickens the same way. Again, keep the chickens moving to prevent flare-ups. If the birds start to burn, move them to a cooler section of the grill.

Set aside 1 cup of barbecue sauce for serving. After the chickens have grilled about 8 minutes on the second side, brush the skin side with barbecue sauce and turn the halves. Grill for 2 minutes to sizzle the sauce, then brush the bone side with sauce and turn the chickens again. Grill another couple of minutes before removing the chickens. The chickens are done when an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of a thigh (but not touching the bone) registers about 180 degrees Fahrenheit.

Transfer the chicken halves to plates or a platter and let rest for 3 minutes before serving with the reserved sauce.

Note: Using the Indirect Method: You can also grill chicken halves using the indirect method. In this case, arrange the chicken pieces on the grate skin-side up. Indirect grill for 40 to 50 minutes, mopping the chickens often. Brush the barbecue sauce on the birds at the end. It is not necessary to turn the chicken halves. Indirect grilling is safer and more predictable (it is virtually impossible to burn an indirect-grilled chicken if you follow the proper cooking time.) But it lacks the theatrics of direct grilling and so should be avoided at a cookout where you want to show off. No guts, no glory.

Basic Barbecue Sauce

Basic Barbecue Mop Sauce

AOL Users:

Use your AOL screen name to sign in and begin adding your own tags

Sign in Now

New Users:

Don't have a screen name yet?

Register here and you'll soon be on your way to tagging recipes.

Register

Recipe Location

This recipe has been added to the following public cookbooks:
RC's Chicken, Interesting recipes, Bill D'Andrea cooks, mary's cokbook, Dana's Favorites

Recent Reviews

Recent Reviews
Rating Submitted by Comment Summary
JAbel56310
07/05/08 12:08 AM
Icon

Indirect Cooking--GREAT!!!

I don't understand all of the negative comments. I did make a few changes out of scheduling necessity, but the chicken was wonderful. I cut up the chicken to save time cooking as my guest had arrived. I made the rub and the mop sauce, preheated the grill for about 15 minutes. Put the rub on the chicken, but could only wait about 10 minutes before cooking INDIRECT HEAT on unlit side of grill. After 10 minutes, we started using the mop sauce on the chicken pieces every few minutes. The chicken browned beautifully and was fully done in about 30-40 minutes. The taste was AWESOME!!! You should probably TRY the recipe before knocking it.
DEB
07/04/08 03:14 PM
Icon

Your links are a waste of time now - needs overhaul

Yes, I am getting very tired of AOL's links. It is getting too bothersome now to even try to read
cookiecdcmk
07/03/08 08:49 AM
Icon

MISLEADING REVIEWS

Steve Raichlen's recipes are generally very good as shown in his book "BBQ USA". I have found that the best chicken comes out when using indirect grilling, as the novice griller cannot control the heat with direct grilling thus the problem with this recipe. Using brining for about 4 hours and then indirect grilling with basting cooking for 60-70 minutes make juicy chicken. His book also has an excellent Buffalo Wing recipe.
gomezcorp
07/03/08 08:44 AM
Icon

Sear then Bake on Grill

22 minutes on the grill may not cook a half chicken thoroughly. Flare ups are definately a problem. I indirect grill everytime. I start by by searing the halves rib side down first for about 8 minutes and then the skin side down until browed and crisp. Watch for flare ups! Then place on the cool side of the grill and cover. Cook a total of 45 and I'm done. My grill bakes them at about 450.
clavin777
07/03/08 07:03 AM
Icon

president chicken

Indirect cooking might be having a barbque with a flu on top U shaped directing heat down cooking on a separate surface other than the grill.

1 - 5 of 30 Reviews | Next

Rate & Review This Recipe

AOL Users:

Use your AOL screen name to sign in and add your own rating and review.
Sign In Now

New Users:

Don't have a screen name yet? Register here and you'll soon be on your way to rating & reviewing recipes.
Register

ADVERTISEMENT

More Recipes By Steven Raichlen

  1. basic beer-can chicken
  2. good old american grilled chicken
  3. grilled eggplant dip
  4. grilled pizza
  5. hamburgers with herb butter

Dinner Tonight

Dinner TonightCampbell's

Plagued by the age-old question "What's for dinner"? We've got a recipe for every night of the week.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Advanced Search

    Share Your Recipes

    Have a great recipe? Share it with the world!
    Share Your Recipe

    Get Organized

    Have a bunch of recipes ready to be filled into a cookbook?
    Create a Cookbook

    Highest Rated Recipes

    1. inside-out cheeseburgers
    2. guacamole en molcajete
    3. cajun chicken pasta
    4. bacon candy
    5. real cornbread

    Also on AOL

    © 2008 AOL, LLC All Rights Reserved

    Most people grill chicken halves or pieces slathered in sugary barbecue sauce, but sugar burns with prolonged exposure to heat, almost guaranteeing that the skin will char before the meat is cooked through. So what are the secrets to direct grilling chicken without burning it? First, season the bird with a rub rather than marinating it in a sugar-based barbecue sauce. This gives you plenty of flavor without the risk of burning. Next, if you must baste the bird (and basting is part of grilling chicken), use a vinegar-based mop, not a sweet barbecue sauce. Finally, apply the barbecue sauce at the end of cooking so that it sizzles without burning.