Hello All,
Well it has been four years and this recipe was always planned to be next and now here it is! Just four years late.... Oh well! This recipe has been a big hit with friends and family, so hopefully it was worth the four year wait.
...
As promised I was working on a Jamaican jerk recipe to go with the Jamaican rice and peas recipe. Life got a little busy but I am back! Jerk chicken is a staple of Jamaican cuisine. Jerk chicken is spicy, with most of the heat coming from allspice, black pepper, and Scotch bonnet peppers. Jerk chicken is traditionally slow roasted in fire pits in the ground. I cooked this batch of jerk chicken in the oven, because I was in between barbecues I will include what I do when I use the Traeger, so that you all get an even smokier flavor for your jerk chicken!
Jerk cooking is influenced by many different cultures. The style originated with the native Taino and Arawak people of Jamaica. The work "jerk" comes from the Incan borrowed Spanish word charqui, which means dried strips of meat. This is also where the English work jerky comes from. In the 1700s escaped former slaves, called the Maroons. Many of the Maroons lived and intermarried with the Native Jamaicans. They used this style of cooking to preserve wild boar on other meats, when living in the mountains and hiding from their captors. Overtime the style of cooking incorporated other types of meat and became less drying meat to preserve it and more about getting nice, slow cooked, juicy meat! In Jamaica green pimento wood is used to get the smoky flavor.
Well it has been four years and this recipe was always planned to be next and now here it is! Just four years late.... Oh well! This recipe has been a big hit with friends and family, so hopefully it was worth the four year wait.
...
As promised I was working on a Jamaican jerk recipe to go with the Jamaican rice and peas recipe. Life got a little busy but I am back! Jerk chicken is a staple of Jamaican cuisine. Jerk chicken is spicy, with most of the heat coming from allspice, black pepper, and Scotch bonnet peppers. Jerk chicken is traditionally slow roasted in fire pits in the ground. I cooked this batch of jerk chicken in the oven, because I was in between barbecues I will include what I do when I use the Traeger, so that you all get an even smokier flavor for your jerk chicken!
Jerk cooking is influenced by many different cultures. The style originated with the native Taino and Arawak people of Jamaica. The work "jerk" comes from the Incan borrowed Spanish word charqui, which means dried strips of meat. This is also where the English work jerky comes from. In the 1700s escaped former slaves, called the Maroons. Many of the Maroons lived and intermarried with the Native Jamaicans. They used this style of cooking to preserve wild boar on other meats, when living in the mountains and hiding from their captors. Overtime the style of cooking incorporated other types of meat and became less drying meat to preserve it and more about getting nice, slow cooked, juicy meat! In Jamaica green pimento wood is used to get the smoky flavor.
Josh's Jamaican Jerk Chicken
Ingredients (Serves around 4-6):
- About 3 lbs of bone in chicken meat. I did 12 drumsticks.
- 1/2 onion, preferably white
- 3 green onion
- 2-3 scotch bonnet peppers (or habanero)
- 3 garlic cloves
- 1 lime
- 2 tablespoon of oil (your choice. I use olive)
- 1 tablespoon of vinegar
- 3 tablespoon of soy sauce
- juice from half an orange
- 1 1/2 teaspoons of grated ginger
- 4 tablespoons of dried thyme
- 1 tablespoon of ground allspice
- 1 tablespoon of brown sugar
- 1/2 tablespoon of salt
- 1 1/2 teaspoon of ground black pepper
- 1 teaspoon of ground nutmeg
- 1 teaspoon of ground cinnamon
Veggies that go into the marinade |
Directions:
- Roughly chop up vegetables and put into the blender. There is nothing special about chopping the vegetables, just make sure that your blender can handle the size of the pieces.
- Blend ingredients until smooth. The consistency should be relatively smooth but doesn't have to be liquid smooth, just no rough chunks.
- Poke the chicken with a fork. This is known as "jerking" the chicken.
- Marinate chicken for 2 to 24 hours. Bag up the chicken. Put in fridge. When you go more than 24 hours when marinating chicken starts to break down and gets soft.
- Take chicken out of fridge and set on the counter for an hour.
- Smoke for 15 to 30 min if using a wood pellet bbq or smoker. Skip this if you are using the oven.
- Set oven or bbq at 300 to 350 degrees. This is your choice. I like 300 degrees. Jerk chicken is traditionally cooked low and slow, but if you want to raise the temp to 350 degrees, that would work as well too. If its the weekend and you have all day, feel free to go even lower!. I usually do the chicken on the Traeger, but the day I took these pictures I did it in the oven. A wood pellet or charcoal bbq will always have a better flavor than the oven when it comes to chicken, but I was in between barbeques, the time I took the pictures, so I had to use the oven.
- Cook chicken to 165 degrees. This will take about 80 to 90 minutes at 300 degrees and around 60 minutes at 350 degrees. I turn the chicken over halfway through and brush on a little extra marinade.
- Let chicken rest for 5-10 minutes and then eat! Always let meat rest, it helps keep the juices in.
Jerk Chicken with my Rice and Peas, and a Caribbean slaw