As I mentioned in Monday's post, J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is on a roll in his Food Lab series over at Serious Eats. A recent favorite of mine was his investigation into oven-roasted chicken wings. He wanted to make oven roasted chicken wings that were the same as deep fried wings, without the mess of deep frying.
*My favorite quote from the article: "I'd be willing to wager my negligible income that the Venn Diagram of people scared of frying and people who own well-seasoned cast iron woks looks like two non-overlapping circles." This is why I'm loving his posts - Kenji's combination of humor, obsession, food science, and pure geekiness makes my heart sing.
His answer, in a nutshell? Dry brine the wings for at least eight hours in the refrigerator, using a mix of salt and baking powder. All three of these things (the refrigerator, salt, and baking powder) help crisp up the skin on the wings. How? By drying the skin out, and increasing its alkalinity, you increase its browning. *Yes, increasing the alkalinity of a food helps in browning. And yes, I know my wife is the chemist in the family, and will probably want to correct everything I've just said.Â
So, why post this myself? Why not just link to Kenji's post and be done with it? Because, in perfecting oven baked wings, he missed something. Chicken wings taste better grilled then oven baked. I had to know - what if I tried Kenji's approach with my grill roasted wing technique?
*OK, I had to try out Kenji's baking powder trick as well - he had my curiosity piqued. Did it really matter?
The answer is...great chicken wings. These wings come out browned, crispy and delicious. Obsessive food science combined with grilling makes a wonderful combination!
Recipe: Grilled Buffalo Chicken Wings
Equipment:
Cook time: 40 minutes
- Grill (I used a Weber Summit. Here is the current version of my grill.
)
Ingredients:
- 4 lbs chicken wings, cut into wingette and drumette sections, tips discarded
- 3 teaspoons kosher salt
- 3 teaspoons baking powder
Wing Sauce
- 1 stick of butter, melted (4 ounces)
- ½ cup Frank's Red Hot sauce (traditional for Buffalo wings)
Directions:
1. Dry brine the wings: Toss the wings with the kosher salt and baking powder in three batches - 1 teaspoon kosher salt, 1 teaspoon baking powder, and â…“rd of the wings per batch. Spread the wings out on a sheet pan with a rack over it, so they aren't touching each other. Refrigerate, uncovered, for eight hours to 24 hours before cooking.
Wings dry brined in salt and baking powder |
2. Prepare the grill: Set your grill up for indirect high heat cooking. For my Weber Summit, this means preheating for 15 minutes, then turning off all the burners except for the two outer burners (burners 1 and 6) which I leave on high.
3. Prepare the wing sauce: Melt the butter, then whisk in the Frank's Red Hot.
4. Cook the wings: Put the wings on the grill grate, over the unlit section, so they are cooking with indirect heat. Cook with the lid closed for twenty minutes. Flip the wings, then cook, lid closed, for another ten to twenty minutes, until the wings are well browned. Move the wings to a large bowl, pour the sauce over them, and toss until the wings are well covered with sauce. Let them rest in the sauce for a few minutes, toss them again, then serve.
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Serving Options:
It is traditional to serve the wings with celery sticks and blue cheese dressing. I like to replace the celery and blue cheese with a spring mix salad tossed with blue cheese dressing.
Variations:
*Smoked wings: To make the wings even better, smoke the wings while you're grilling them. I prefer to do this on a charcoal grill - add 1 fist-sized chunk of hickory wood that has been soaked for an hour to the coals. Â If you really want to try this on a gas grill, soak 1 cup of wood chips for an hour. Â Wrap the chips in an envelope of aluminum foil, poke a couple of holes in the top and put it over one of the lit burners on your grill.
*The problem is that gas grills need to allow a lot of airflow, so combustion gases can escape. Â This lets the smoke escape as well.
*Hotter or milder sauce - I think Franks Red Hot is pretty mild, and the equal ratio of butter to hot sauce in the recipe gives you a "medium" heat level for your wings. If you want hot wings, go with ¾ cup Franks, and ¼ cup butter (half a stick.) If you want milder wings, go with ¼ cup Franks, and ¾ cup butter (a stick and a half).
*Nuclear sauce: If you want really hot wings, go with half Tabasco sauce, half butter. Tabasco has a lot more kick than Franks...
Notes:
*Chicken wings drip a lot of fat into your grill, and because of the indirect cooking, it won't burn away…until the next time you preheat your grill. Then you'll have a grease fire on your hands. I recommend making a drip pan out of aluminum foil, and putting it under the grill grate over the unlit burners. Or, the next time you cook, assume you're going to have to wait an extra ten minutes for the grease fire do die down while you're preheating.
time to clean my grill.
See the dark shadow under and around the wings? That's not a shadow, that's a grease fire waiting to happen... |
What do you think? Questions? Other ideas? Leave them in the comments section below.
Related Posts:
Grill Roasted Chicken Wings
Grilled Chicken Wings, Spicy Asian Glazed
Easy Bbq Sauce
Adapted from:
J. Kenji Lopez-Alt: The Food Lab: In Search of the Best Oven-Fried Buffalo Wings [SeriousEats.com]
Stephen Raichlen: Buffa-Que Wings [BBQ USA: 425 Fiery Recipes from All Across America]
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Jim
Thanks. Should the wings be rinsed and dried after brining, before smoking?
Mike Vrobel
Rinsed, no.
Dried, yes.[Update] This is a dry brine, so they don't need to be dried either - they should be pretty dry coming out of the refrigerator.Mike V @ DadCooksDinner
Thank you!
arizona boy
This really works!!! May be the best wings I've ever had!!!!
Mike V @ DadCooksDinner
No, I don't rinse them. Did you use Kosher salt? Table salt is more salty; cut the amount in half if you use table salt.
DublD
I just tried this and was very pleased with the results but the wings were very salty. Should I have rinsed them after dry brining??
Mike V @ DadCooksDinner
You're welcome, glad you enjoyed them!
Mary N.
I made these for my Hubby today for Father's Day. The only thing I did different is double the sauce, we like 'em hot! They came out fantastic! The baking powder really works! I refrigerated them for the full 24 hours befor grillin; yum yum yum!! Thanks for sharing this great recipe.
coov07
The wings were absolutely great! I tossed them with three different sauces and we loved the wings best naked. They were actually crispy! Thanks for the effort and great recipes! My wife is hooked.
MikeV @ DadCooksDinner
@coov07:
You're welcome! I'm glad I could help you impress the wife. 🙂
MikeV @ DadCooksDinner
@Ted: Thank you!
For other sauces, I would recommend teriyaki sauce or spicy asian sauce. Do everything else the same, and toss with these sauces at the end.