Beer Can Chicken Roasting
© Copyright 2012. Do not copy. All rights reserved and enforced.
To do this, you poke the neck cavity of a chicken down onto an opened beer can, and roast the chicken standing up.
The idea is that you have the can half filled with beer, and the steam and aroma from that flavour the chicken (disregard promises of making it moister -- only fat makes meat moist, not water, steam or beer.)
You season the inside of the chicken, and you can also use a dry rub on the outside if you wish. Cut the top off a beer can, so that the top is completely open (mind the sharp edges.) Have the can half-filled with beer. Toss into the beer some flavouring such as onion pieces and garlic cloves. Insert can into the neck cavity of the bird. Stand the bird upright on the grill or in the oven, on a roasting pan, and roast. You make a tripod with the beer can and the two legs of the bird, to help it keep upright.
Still, it's not terribly stable. As the chicken shrinks during cooking, there's a danger of it leaning and then tipping over. You can buy racks now designed to hold the beer cans upright, to do anyway with worries of the whole thing toppling over. Most of these fold away for easier storage. Some are also designed to also keep the chicken from coming into contact with the beer can.
The terrible secret behind all this is that it doesn't actually add any perceptible beer flavour to the chicken -- still, guys like the idea, and if it's a way of getting them to roast a chicken for a change, their partners may not complain if they have some fun while doing it.
Cooking Tips for Beer Can Chicken Roasting
Nutrition for Beer Can Chicken Roasting
History Notes for Beer Can Chicken Roasting
Also called:
Beer Butt Chicken
See Also:
Chicken, Roasting Pans, Vertical Chicken Roaster
Other entries for: Cooking Techniques
Barbeque, Broil, Curing, Fry, Garnishes
Cooking Techniques: Related Pages
Next Pages
- A la Parilla
- A la Riojana
- Abaisse
- Aceto Dolce
- Acetomel
- Acidulate
- Acidulated Water
- Adjust Seasoning
- Adjusting the Taste of Dishes
- Affriander
- Al Carbón
- Al Fresco
- Al Pastor
- Alambre
- Alla Bolognese
- Au Beurre
- Au Blanc
- Au Bleu
- Au Four
- Au Gratin
- Au Jus
- Au Lait
- Au Naturel
- Au Poivre
- Au Torchon
- À Blanc
- À l'Africaine
- À l'Agnès Sorel
- À l'Aillade
- À l'Ailleule
- À l'Albigeoise
- À l'Albufera
- À l'Algérienne
- À l'Alsacienne
- À l'Ambassadrice
- À l'Américaine
- À l'Ancienne
- À l'Andalouse
- À l'Anglaise
- À l'Anversoise



