Hounds citrus brine


 

ScottE

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Hound's Citrus Brined Chicken

Prepare the brine: 1 gallon water 1 cup Kosher salt or 1/2 cup table salt juice of 3 oranges juice of three limes juice of three lemons rinds from same 1 sliced white onion 1 head of garlic, crushed stems from a bunch of cilantro, chopped serranos to taste, minimum of 4 rough ground cumin and coriander 2 Tbsp each 1/4 cup chili powder or any ground chile you prefer (1/4 cup onion powder is optional) (1/4cup garlic powder is optional) Place the bird(s) and plenty of brine solution in a ziploc bag(s) and leave refrigerated overnight prior to cooking. A cooler works fine also. I use a 5 gal beverage cooler for all but the biggest turkeys. Frozen soda bottles, or ice can be used to keep the cold. {8 lbs of ice= 1 gallon of water} An hour before cooking take the bird out and thoroughly wash it down with cold water for at least 30 seconds. You can place aromatics like garlic heads, apples, citrus in the cavity of the bird for the cooking. I like also to place orange slices between skin and meat. Smoke rear end of chicken toward the fire for 45 minutes/lb @ 225°F until the thigh is about 170°F. You can rotate as necessary to avoid charring. Cooking this way will result in inedible skin, but juicy chicken. If you like the crispy skin then place the chicken near the firebox. This works for either chickens or turkeys. If you eliminate the brine (salt and water) the rest of the recipe makes an excellent marinade for grilled chicken. (Recipe courtesy of Cuchulain Libby, a.k.a. Hound.) (Editor's note: this method sounds crazy and the brine looks terrible, but IT WORKS! You won't believe it is chicken. Flakes apart like fish. You must try this and it works on turkey .)

The cooking directions are for an off-set but this a kick-arse brine and it works well in all smokers!!
 
Saw you reference to this in another post. This looks interesting to say the least. Can't even imagine what it taste like with all those different flavors. I've used them all, but not together
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How would you describe the taste?
 
I really cant. It would seem like a latin citrus flavor similar to El Pollo Loco but it is completely different It gives the meat a different texture after the overnight brine. It is just outstanding and quite unique compared to most brines.
 

 

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