RECIPE: REC: Cornell chicken. Made this last night, it was delicious!

RECIPE:

cindy

Well-known member
Cornell Chicken

Cooks Country

From the episode: Northern Cookout

Do not brine the chicken longer than 2 hours or the vinegar will make the meat mushy. Baste the chicken carefully in step 4, as any excess will drip onto the fire and flare up.

Serves 4 to 6.

Chicken

2 quarts water

3 1/2 cups cider vinegar

1/4 cup salt

2 (3 1/2-to 4-pound) whole chickens , halved (see tip)

Seasoning and Sauce

1 tablespoon ground poultry seasoning

Salt and pepper

1/2 cup cider vinegar

3 tablespoons Dijon mustard

1 tablespoon chopped fresh sage leaves

1 tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary

1/2 cup olive oil

1. For the chicken: Whisk water, vinegar, and salt in large bowl until salt dissolves. Add chicken and refrigerate, covered, for 1 to 2 hours.

2. For the seasoning and sauce: Combine poultry seasoning, 2 teaspoons salt, and 2 teaspoons pepper in small bowl; set aside. Process vinegar, mustard, sage, rosemary, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and 1/2 teaspoon pepper in blender until smooth, about 1 minute. With blender running, slowly add oil until incorporated. Transfer vinegar sauce to small bowl and reserve for basting chicken in step 4.

3. Heat all burners on high for 15 minutes, then turn all burners to medium-low. (For charcoal grill, light 75 coals; when covered with fine gray ash, spread evenly over bottom of grill. Set cooking grate in place and heat covered, with lid vents open completely, for 5 minutes.) Scrape and oil cooking grate.

4. Remove chicken from brine. Pat dry with paper towels and rub all over with poultry seasoning mixture. Arrange chicken skin-side up on grill and baste with vinegar sauce. Grill, covered, until chicken is well browned on bottom and meat registers 120 degrees, 25 to 30 minutes, basting with sauce halfway through cooking. Flip chicken skin-side down and baste with sauce. Continue to grill, covered, until skin is golden brown and crisp and thigh meat registers 170 to 175 degrees, 20 to 25 minutes longer. Transfer chicken to platter (do not cover) and let rest 5 minutes. Serve.

Make Ahead: Both the spice rub and the sauce can be made up to 3 days ahead. The chicken can be brined, patted dry, and rubbed with the seasoning mixture up to 8 hours ahead.

 
Yes, isn't it good? It was developed by Prof. Robert Baker at Cornell, and is sold

every year at our NY State Fair. State Fair and 90-degree heat? Feels like a million years ago now!

The recipe I have for it, though, contains a raw egg.

 
Question: when you removed the chicken from the brine did you rinse the brine off, or...

...just 'pat dry'?

I'm used to having to rinse very thoroughly to keep the finished product from being so salty. 1/4 cup of salt is not a ton, but I imagine the brine is quite salty regardless.

This looks interesting. I am a big vinegar fan in just about any form, so I'd be inclined to try this recipe.

Thanks!

Michael

 
Add it to the marinade. It acts an emulsifier to keep the ingredients from separating. Rec inside

Our church has a chicken barbeque a few times a year, and this is the recipe that they use. 'Don't mean to take away from your post, just adding a variation:

1 large egg (to hold ingredients together)
1 cup vegetable oil
2 cups cider vinegar
3 Tbs coarse salt (Kosher or sea)
1 Tbs poultry seasoning (we use Buck's)
1/2 Tsp freshly ground black pepper

Whisk all together and marinate rinsed chicken halves for 4-6 hours in refrigerator. Pat dry and grill. (I've heard that it was originally used as a basting sauce on chicken grilled over open coals).

 
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