I have seen several recipes dont' know which is best, direct with raised grid or indirect. Also should bird be skin down at first then flipped over? I assume that it is agreed that brest temp shuld be 160. Thanks in advance for any help or ideas.
RDMS
Comments
direct, it is grilled chicken. you might do it a little higher on a raised grid at medium temps, and never flip it (the bones will get good and crispy, my wife likes them that way). if it's raised higher too, the radiant heat from the dome will help cook the upper side. so flipping becomes a matter of choice. most times we flip food to cook the other side. but with a closed dome like the BGE, you DO get some cooking of the upper side.
if you spatchcock it direct, but at higher temps and closer to the lump, you will need to flip it because you'll incinerate the underside while the top falls way behind.
indirect, it's just roasting. also good. it will cook equally from top/bottom this way. and flipping it doesn't really expose the skin to any more heat, so no need to flip it.
always ask WHAT IS HAPPENING WHEN I COOK IT THIS WAY? or that way. or another way.
what happens, why does it happen, and what are the dis/advantages?
and try both ways. someone's 'best' way is someone elses's never-in-a-million-years way
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I'm doing my first two tonight, and I can't decide.
Did 385, raised direct, skin on, Tsunami Spin, Hickory Wood. Came out perfect, moist, and flavorful.
+1. The 250 degrees in my comment was a typo.
If you're worried about pathogens, found this interesting (hope it formats ok)
Here's where it gets complicated: Cooking temp is not the sole determinant of safety.
Pathogens start croaking at about 130°F. But at that temp, it takes a long time to kill them all. Ground beef held at 130°F in the center for about 2 hours is considered pasteurized (107 kill rate). The cooking time gets lower as the temperature goes higher. So chicken at 140°F degrees will be pasteurized in about 12 minutes, while at 160°F degrees, pathogens are destroyed in just 7.3 seconds, hence the USDA guidelines for the consumer. Take chicken up to 160°F for as little as 7 seconds and you're safe.
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Gonna do raised/direct next time to get the skin a little more crispy.
thanks for all the tips/advice on this board. great stuff
Does anyone use a drip pan when spatchcocking? Has anyone ever noticed a burnt grease taste when the fat drips out of the skin and onto the fire? When I've tried spatchcocking, the fat/drippings from the chicken smoke/burn heavily for the entire cook. (There is a usually a continuous flow of white smoke out of the top of my grill for the entire cook.)