However, nothing is so inherently American as BBQ and BBQ sauce.
There is something that speaks of summer and family about meat cooked over open fire with sweet and tangy sauces dripping off every bite.
Problem is....who the hell has that much time to make a meal any more?
It's Weds night, kids are hungry, wife is hungry, wants comforting familiar good food.
Whatcha gonna do hot shot? Whatcha gonna do?
This is something quickerish I make that hits the spot. As with most of my stuff it is easy and cheats, alot.
It is my oven BBQ chicken wings. About as easy as easy gets...but so damn good.
First get your oven going at around 400, yes that high, now shut up.
Wings can go on frozen onto the pan. I prefer the wing ding style from Perdue or Tyson. You can defrost them, which is fine, but drop 10 minutes off the first cooking time. And for god sakes if you do defrost them, make sure you squeeze them dry with paper towel and that you did not start to cook them in the microwave.
Honestly the best way I have found to defrost wings is in a steel or glass bowl full of warmish water, change every 5 minutes until defrosted.
Toss them liberally with Lawerys Season salt, garilc powder, and Old bay seasoning.
Shove them in there and dont touch for a half hour.
Now that those are going, we got sauce to make.
Start with Open Pit brand bbq sauce, original. Don't complain here, Open pit has a great base to work with. It is a vinegar and tomato based sauced that is not very sweet. Believe it or not many competition cooks in this country start with Kraft BBQ as a base....so shut up.
Anyway, time to doctor, take a small bottle of this sauce and add it to a nice sealable container. Now add:
1/4 cup Apple Cider Vinegar
3/4 cup light brown sugar
1/4 cup honey
1 tbl Soy Sauce (not low sodium)
1 tsp Season salt
2 tsp garlic powder
2 tsp dried onion
2 tsp dried pepper flakes
1 tsp mustard (I like grainy mustard here, but each his own)
1 tsp pepper
2 tsp hot sauce
Adjust this to your liking and hit. Now just let that sit for about 20-30 minutes to get the flavors to hydate a bit.
After 30 minutes turn the pan around in the over, but don't flip the chicken, its not done yet.
Crank the heat to 450 and cook at least 10 more minutes. The chicken should be done now and the skin should be getting kind of crispy. The spices on it should look like they are on the verge of burning.
Now the fun part, sauce time. We are going to do this a couple of times.
Sauce all the wings on the top, use a bbq brush or silicon one, this coat should be even and not very heavy.
Now throw them back in and let them go for 5 minutes. The sauce should look very sticky, like caramel on the chicken now. HIT EM AGAIN, same procedure, and let them go another 5.
Turn off the oven, give them one more coat of sauce and stick them back in for just a minute, while you assemble your plates.
Serve em up and you have delightfully sticky, sweet, tangy, spicey wings that the family will go nuts for.
This goes great with Blue Box mac and cheese, and in about an hour you have a great family meal. Don't heat up too bad either.
Yeah I will get to the complicated stuff eventually. Right now I am havin fun.
Next time on the brass chef....Beef and peppers with Peanut sauce, Asian, Mediterranean, Thai, oh my.....and ready in 30 minutes of cooking.
Couple quick questions on procedure. Most of it makes perfect sense.
ReplyDelete1. For the warm-water wing defrost, do we keep the wings in the bag? I am assuming yes.
2. For the saucing procedure, can you give a little more detail on when to flip 'em? If we flip 'em?
dont flip em, no need to really put them in a bag either....this is the way we would do it at the restaurant
ReplyDeleteWow. How easy is that??
ReplyDeleteAwesome. thanks.