So even with the horrible weather, I had to test out some new things I had read about so here is my 3rd attempt at a BBQ chicken.. spatchcocked with my new meat shears (had to remove the spine!), brined for 24 hours, refrigerated uncovered for 12 hours and then cooked for about 2 hours at around 280f.. really needed to be 300+ but it was *damn* cold!
Warming up!
Result!
Skin not as crispy as I'd like, but not bad considering I couldnt get the bbq to the right temperature. Shoulda added more fuel to start with... still learning
aris wrote:The brick doesn't really affect the skin - it just makes the chicken a more uniform thickness all around ensuring a more even cook.
It ensures more of a spatchcocked chicken touches the grid and evens up the crispness of the skin. It's a well established technique going back decades, possibly even longer "chicken al mattone " from Italy for example.
To get the skin crispy you will need higher temps, I cook spatchcocked chicken every week and cook it indirect on the OTS with a temp at the top of the dome of 400f (grate temp would be a little lower but have no idea how much?) A six pound bird will be done within an hour and a half (usually!!) and nice crispy skin. Did you remove the breast bone? I always do as it helps everything sit at the same level on the grill.
I love to cook in the snow. I think there's something really rewarding about winter barbecue. In fact, other than the pain in the backside of cooking by lantern, I think I prefer it on the whole to summer barbecue!
I used to use an old dressing gown wrapped around my ECB to keep it warm on *really* cold (-8) nights, but one night I dozed off, the gown slipped down a little until part was touching the floor, and a spark from the fire landed on it - whoosh. One destroyed gown and nasty plastic fibres melted onto the outside of my smoker.
Nowadays I just use a hotter fire (no minion method on cold nights, just a full bowl of lit coals) that i restoke more regularly, perhaps every three hours or so.