Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
John F wrote:Traci
A couple of question:
11) is the egg part of the marinade?
2) so you baked this (vs. the grilling that Jenise describes)? Any import to skin side up or down then in the beginning?
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Jenise wrote:Oh, F word!!!
About 45 minutes ago, I woke up to the thawed chicken wings I'd gotten out of the freezer last night and thought, huh, how shall I marinate these. If I'd seen this post, all would be different. In fact, I can always go rinse the other off. Hmmmm!
Do you know that I made this recipe just twice all those years ago (can you believe so much time has passed and how our lives have changed?) and then completely forgot about it? How dumb is that, it was great!
Off to rinse some chicken....
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
TraciM wrote:You know what else you could do with those chicken wings? How 'bout the wine-herb-apple oven baked chicken. That's a keeper, too!
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
TraciM wrote:Topic: RC: Lucques\' \"Messy Mustard Chicken\"
Author: Jenise
Date: 20030402110811
This recipe from Lucques\' chef/proprietor Suzanne Goin appeared in one of those can-you-get-the-recipe-for-me columns somewhere. Lucques is widely thought to be one of the very best restaurants in L.A. I had an incredible dinner there once....
Anyway, I made this on Sunday, and my guest of honor (Traci!) requested it, so here is my adaption.
1 3-4 pound chicken, cut in half
1/2 c dijon mustard
1 T olive oil
2 T white vermouth
1-2 T chopped fresh tarragon
1 egg
Mix the marinade and rub onto the surface of the chicken, being careful to push some under the skin for the fullest possible flavor. Marinate 8 hours or overnight. Grill skin side down (this is where it makes the big mess) for ten minutes until well-marked, then turn chicken, reduce heat and grill skin side up for 20-25 minutes or until done.
Since I was doing three 5 lb birds for about 15 adults, I tripled the recipe, cut the chicken into serving-size pieces (I\'d rather leave them in halves under other circumstances, though) and broiled them indoors for approximately 30 minutes.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Bob Henrick wrote:TraciM wrote:Topic: RC: Lucques\' \"Messy Mustard Chicken\"
Author: Jenise
Date: 20030402110811
This recipe from Lucques\' chef/proprietor Suzanne Goin appeared in one of those can-you-get-the-recipe-for-me columns somewhere. Lucques is widely thought to be one of the very best restaurants in L.A. I had an incredible dinner there once....
Anyway, I made this on Sunday, and my guest of honor (Traci!) requested it, so here is my adaption.
1 3-4 pound chicken, cut in half
1/2 c dijon mustard
1 T olive oil
2 T white vermouth
1-2 T chopped fresh tarragon
1 egg
Mix the marinade and rub onto the surface of the chicken, being careful to push some under the skin for the fullest possible flavor. Marinate 8 hours or overnight. Grill skin side down (this is where it makes the big mess) for ten minutes until well-marked, then turn chicken, reduce heat and grill skin side up for 20-25 minutes or until done.
Since I was doing three 5 lb birds for about 15 adults, I tripled the recipe, cut the chicken into serving-size pieces (I\'d rather leave them in halves under other circumstances, though) and broiled them indoors for approximately 30 minutes.
Traci, do you remember the temperature you cooked the chicken? I am thinking this would probably lend itself to grilling over charcoal, and am guessing at somewhere around 400 degrees. It sounds delicious and will give flavor to the breast meat. Thanks for posting it
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
Jenise wrote:Not Traci, but though she and I do them in the oven the instructions are actually written for a true grill which you'll find when you read the details. You're good to go!
Bob Henrick wrote:TraciM wrote:Topic: RC: Lucques\' \"Messy Mustard Chicken\"
Author: Jenise
Date: 20030402110811
This recipe from Lucques\' chef/proprietor Suzanne Goin appeared in one of those can-you-get-the-recipe-for-me columns somewhere. Lucques is widely thought to be one of the very best restaurants in L.A. I had an incredible dinner there once....
Anyway, I made this on Sunday, and my guest of honor (Traci!) requested it, so here is my adaption.
1 3-4 pound chicken, cut in half
1/2 c dijon mustard
1 T olive oil
2 T white vermouth
1-2 T chopped fresh tarragon
1 egg
Mix the marinade and rub onto the surface of the chicken, being careful to push some under the skin for the fullest possible flavor. Marinate 8 hours or overnight. Grill skin side down (this is where it makes the big mess) for ten minutes until well-marked, then turn chicken, reduce heat and grill skin side up for 20-25 minutes or until done.
Since I was doing three 5 lb birds for about 15 adults, I tripled the recipe, cut the chicken into serving-size pieces (I\'d rather leave them in halves under other circumstances, though) and broiled them indoors for approximately 30 minutes.
Traci, do you remember the temperature you cooked the chicken? I am thinking this would probably lend itself to grilling over charcoal, and am guessing at somewhere around 400 degrees. It sounds delicious and will give flavor to the breast meat. Thanks for posting it
Randy P wrote:OK, so this chicken recipe had me drooling all day. I got home early and mixed up the marinade and matched it up with some chicken quarters. Only got about 3 hours marinade time but it worked out alright. Put them on the Big Green Egg indirect on a raised grid at 350 dome temp.
Cooked them 90 minutes and threw some sweet corn downstairs with 40 minutes to go.
Have to say it was really good!
I like finding unique ways to prepare chicken, here is one of my creations. -RP
http://www.nakedwhiz.com/thechicken.htm
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