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Jamaican Jerk Chicken
Jamaican Jerk Chicken is a spicy, smoky delicious entree. Jamaica is internationally famous for jerk chicken. The most popular way to finish the seasoned meat, and the way we recommend doing it for the summer, is by marinating it in Jerk Seasoning, grilling it (sprinkling occasionally with a Red Stripe or other available Caribbean beer). You can also try smoking it for a fall-off-the-bone tender texture or baking it for an easier finish.
INGREDIENTS
- One 3 1/2 lb chicken (3lb of chicken breasts may be used if preferred)
- 1 – 6 sliced scotch bonnet / jabanero peppers (the more peppers used, the hotter the sauce becomes so be careful!!!!)
- 2 tbsp thyme
- 2 tbsp ground allspice
- 8 cloves garlic, finely chopped
- 3 medium onions, finely chopped
- 1/2 cup olive oil
- 1/2 cup soy sauce
- Juice of one lime
- 1 cup orange juice
- 1 cup white vinegar
- 2 tbsp sugar
- 2 tsp salt
- 2 tsp ground black pepper
- 1 to 2 tsp of the following (to taste)
- Ground cinnamon
- Nutmeg
- Ginger
PREPARATION
- Chop the onions, garlic and peppers. These do not need to be chopped too fine as they will be pulverized by the blender.
- Blend all of the seasonings and liquid in a blender to make the jerk sauce.
- Cut the raw chicken up in to 4 pieces.
- Set some sauce aside for basting and dipping later.
- Rub the remaining sauce in to the meat and leave the chicken in the fridge to marinate overnight.
COOKING
- Grill the meat slowly until cooked, turning regularly. Baste with some of the remaining marinade while cooking. For best results, cook over a barbecue heated with pimento wood.OR
- Bake in the oven for 30 minutes, turn the meat then bake for a further 30 minutes.
TO SERVE
- Chop each quarter chicken portion in to 5 or 6 smaller pieces using a heavy cleaver.
- Use a pair of tongs or other kitchen utensil to hold the chicken in place while chopping and NOT YOUR HAND (you will be chopping with enough pressure to cut through bone!!!)
- Serve with festivals, rice and peas, hardo bread or simple white rice, along with the jerk sauce left over for dipping. (Please check the site for recipes)
NOTES
- Do not touch your eyes, face, mouth or sensitive areas with your hands after touching the peppers. They are EXTREMELY hot. One pepper in your mixture will offer an enjoyable, mild flavor. Go up to six if you’re really adventurous but NOT if you are offering the sauce to children.
Adapted from Jamaican Travel and Culture
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I’ve cooked a lot of Jerk Chicken recipes and this one is BY FAR THE BEST!!! Good Job!! I use 3 habanero’s. Before cooking, marinade has some bite, lingers a bit, seems a bit strong but when you cook chix you get a nice amount of heat without being over-powering and doesn’t linger more than a few seconds. I think if I did 4 habaneros my face would melt off….
The recipe above could be cut in half or do what I do and save half. There is vinegar in it so I would say if stored in the fridge it would last about a couple weeks. Garlic and oil can be problematic but vinegar should counter. Please correct me if I am wrong on storage.
Couple questions:
At the end of the recipe you say “ginger” can be added. I assume that is fresh ginger? Or is it ginger powder? I’ve been putting powder in last 2 x I made it and got rave reviews. Just made it again yesterday and that was when I thought about it a little more. If it is fresh ginger then I am putting way too much powder ginger in. I think the ratio is 1 Tbl Fresh = 1/4 powder. Fresh vs powder actually have very different flavor profiles.
Also, when it comes to Habanero’s. Do you recommend to leave seeds and ribs in or remove them?
Thanks! Again, great recipe.
Hi John,
Apologies for the delayed reply. We like to use fresh ingredients as much as possible but everything is flexible. Also, we in the Caribbean often cook using our hands rather than measuring cups or spoons, so we’ll always tell you that if it tastes good when you’re done, then you’re doing it right! 😉
Regarding your question about adding the pepper seeds and ribs, it’ll depend on how much heat you’re looking for. If you’re making the sauce to share with guests and friends, or children, you DON’T want to add too much of the ribs or seeds. If you’re a smoke-coming-out-of-the-ears kinda guy, then go for it! Enjoy!
This recipe was great. Looking forward to others. Got hooked on this type of fare while visiting the Bahamas. Thanks!
Glad you’re enjoying it. Thanks for watching!
Great Jerk Chicken!!
One clarification needed. Is the Ginger in the recipe fresh or ground (powder)?
thank you!
Hi Heidi,
You can use the ground ginger for this recipe. Using fresh ginger may not make a huge difference in the flavor. Enjoy!
Two tablespoons salt???? That’s gotta be a misprint. My sauce was way too salty with that amount on top of the soy sauce, so I cut it with brown sugar. I see in Chef Irie’s jerk pork medalilion recipe, salt is measured in teaspoons, not tablespoons. Odd, though, that no one else has mentioned this.
Thank you for catching that typo!