Chris in Louisiana
TVWBB All-Star
I read a thread on here a while back about the rotisserie for the Weber 22" kettle. All the bragging about the great chicken it made cost me $139 to order one.
Tried it out tonight. Brined two chickens for an hour or so. Dried them, put lemon wedges inside, seasoned with Tony Chachere's, speared them on, seasoned and trussed them up to prevent flopping.
Used a little less than a chimney starter of Stubbs to fill the two side-holders, with a water pan in the middle, for indirect cooking.
Put the birds on. Adjusted the counter-balance weight. Very easy.
Started out with bottom vents closed. Temp around 400 or a little less. Later on opened it up a crack to keep temp up. Basted at 30 minutes and every 15 minutes after with Roadside Chicken basting recipe. Lost track of time, but guess it took about 2 hours to cook.
The chicken was extraordinarily moist. I've cooked a million beer can chickens. The skin on them was crispier (did not baste them), but I've never had such moist chicken as with this basted rotisserie chicken.
I look forward to trying leg of lamb and rib roast.
Tried it out tonight. Brined two chickens for an hour or so. Dried them, put lemon wedges inside, seasoned with Tony Chachere's, speared them on, seasoned and trussed them up to prevent flopping.
Used a little less than a chimney starter of Stubbs to fill the two side-holders, with a water pan in the middle, for indirect cooking.
Put the birds on. Adjusted the counter-balance weight. Very easy.
Started out with bottom vents closed. Temp around 400 or a little less. Later on opened it up a crack to keep temp up. Basted at 30 minutes and every 15 minutes after with Roadside Chicken basting recipe. Lost track of time, but guess it took about 2 hours to cook.
The chicken was extraordinarily moist. I've cooked a million beer can chickens. The skin on them was crispier (did not baste them), but I've never had such moist chicken as with this basted rotisserie chicken.
I look forward to trying leg of lamb and rib roast.

