Receta Aloha Pineapple Chicken
Aloha Pineapple Chicken
The taste of Hawaii! Sweet and savory grilled chicken has tons of flavor--without marinating! Pineapple juice-based BBQ sauce is the secret.
I have often used a variation of this sauce as a marinade. In fact, I have an upcoming post for a london broil that uses it.
When I made that marinade, I made double the amount, but I'd gotten to thinking that it would likely make a very good dipping sauce for pot stickers, etc. That led to an idea to reduce the sauce until it had a thicker consistency and use it as a BBQ sauce.
Great taste without marinating
I had a test run with it a few days prior to making what you see in these photos and I have to say, I was TOTALLY amazed that just brushing on some of that sauce infused the whole flavor through the chicken. Hard to believe, but it does!
The chicken tastes like you marinated it for hours. I'd venture a guess that if you marinated it in the sauce (don't reduce it), then reduced some more sauce for the glaze, this would be unbelievably good! Certainly if you wanted to try that, it wouldn't destroy anything, it would enhance it--but the flavor may be too powerful for some. If you wish to do this, use 1/2 the sauce to marinate and reduce the other half--just for food safety sake, I wouldn't use what was contaminated by the raw chicken. Yes, you do boil and simmer so any salmonella would likely be killed, but the sauce would be impure due to liquid seeping out of the chicken. It's best to use fresh for the reduced sauce.
Aloha Pineapple Chicken
- 2 whole frying chickens (about 3 lbs each)*
- Aloha Pineapple Sauce:
- 8 oz pineapple juice
- 1/2 cup packed dark brown sugar
- 1/3 cup soy sauce
- 3 large garlic cloves, crushed
- 1 tbs mirin** or white wine
*Pre-cut chicken parts may be substituted but they should be from smaller chickens as large parts take too long to cook on the grill to insure they are cooked to the proper temp.
**Mirin is best to use here, but if you can't find it in your store--it'd be in the Asian food section and a major brand is Kikkoman, then white wine will do.
Cut up chicken into serving pieces. I cut the chickens into quarters, but cut the wing off the breast.
Combine all sauce ingredients in a small saucepan. Bring to boil and reduce heat to a simmer. Simmer, uncovered, for about 10-15 minutes or until sauce is reduced by 50% and has a consistency like maple syrup. Cool to lukewarm then refrigerate until chilled. I recommend you make the sauce either very early in the day or the day before.
Preheat grill to low/med-low heat. If you have a thermometer installed in the lid, grill temp should be 300-350 degrees F.
Place chicken bone side down on grill. Close lid and cook for 20-25 minutes; turn chicken and cook for 20 minutes.
Turn up grill heat to med-high heat. Baste both sides of chicken with the sauce. Cook about 5 minutes on *each* side to crisp chicken.
FYI--internal temperature of chicken should be 180 degrees F for food safety -OR- juices should run clear.
Aloha Pineapple Chicken
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