How Long to Smoke Chicken Quarters in Weber Smokey Mountain
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Confused about smoked chicken leg quarters
- Thread in 'Poultry' Thread starter Started by ssmoke,
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- #1
So from what I gather:
1) I should definitely brine, which I like to do anyway, and the slaughter house brine from the wiki sounds really good
2) I should smoke somewhere between 250 and 300, but then I will want to finish a grill for 10-15 minutes to crisp the skin
OR
3) Smoke above 300 (generally listed as 325 by most commenters) will crisp the skin so then I wouldn't have to finish on the grill
4) I want to smoke until the center of the leg is at 170
Am I missing anything?
What are peoples experience with smoking at say 250/275 & grill vs 325 and no grill? I really would like the skin crispy at the end.
And finally, what about of time smoking should I expect using the two different temperature ranges?
- #2
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I like to do mine at 300 to 325 just so I don't have to mess with the grill after the smoke.
Brad
- #3
so you get crispy skin that range? About how long does it take usually?
ssmoke..........I love smoked leg 1/4's. I think you have all the info right.....thats pretty much how I do mine.I like to do mine at 300 to 325 just so I don't have to mess with the grill after the smoke.
Brad
- #4
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- #5
thanks! I will try this way and hopefully get nice crispy skin.
I cook my chicken raised direct on the Egg - in the 325 range because for me there is nothing worse then rubbery chicken skin.. I get the smoke flavor I want, and the skin texture I like. Time.. about an hour or so maybe,
What type of wood do you all use? Most comments I saw indicated apple
- #6
- #7
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Chix on the smoker is tricky because of the rubber skin problem.
Usually smoked at high temps or finished with a flash on a hot grill? The water pan can get in the way of hot smoking temps. Then the grill comes in handy.
I usually grill mine, but it works either way with some practice.
Having said that, the whole leg is a great piece to work with.
Good luck and good smoking.
- #8
- #9
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With Chicken I am all over the place when it comes to wood - I like cherry, oak, apple, and hickory - chicken will take on smoke pretty fast so be careful, you want the smoke thin and blue so your chicken doesn't taste like an ash tray.
- #10
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If it were me I'd fill the water pan with sand, cover with foil and not look back. If you smoke in any type of windy wet cold weather this will help greatly with the temp swings.I have a weber 22 inch smoker. I think I am now convinced of the no-water way, but should I still keep the pan there right to catch drips? Otherwise seems like quite a bit of ash would come up onto the meat and also generally mess with the stability of the fire.
For chicken I smoke mine in a 325* smoker to get the crispy skin. I do not brine my chicken, I do inject quarters sometimes just for a different flavor profile. Apple is fine for chicken however my current favorite is a 50/50 mix of pecan and cherry.
For your IT you want to probe the thigh not the leg and need to go to 165*
- #11
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I smoke on a WSM and my experience has been if you put water or sand in the pan , you won't get up to 300 degrees. When I do chicken , I go no water pan at all. Chicken on the top rack. Hits 300 easy and crisps up the skin nicely....sometimes I drop the chicken onto the lower rack at the end , just to make sure it's nice and crisp. Not sure what you are cooking on ,, it i hope this is helpfulOne more question if people are still checking this thread... I have been reading more about it and several people indicated they didn't use any water in the pan when smoking at the higher (300+) temps. Is this something I should consider or is water in the pan still needed?
Ok , I just read a bit more and it seems you have a 22 inch WSM , right? Ok def no water pan...trust me....no issues with ash from drippings or temp swings.that chicken juice hits the coals and turns into nice flavorful smoke....and it does not damp the fire....quite the opposite.
cook on the top rack. Don't worry be happy. . :grilling_smilie:
- #12
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- Joined Jun 27, 2013
I am probably wrong, but 165 is what I pull mine at IF I've cooked them low and plan on putting them under the broiler. I thought dark meat had to go higher (170-175 finished temp)?
- #13
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For a chicken breast, I like 165 because the breast dries out so easily.
For a thigh, I like 175 because the fattier thigh will have the texture I like at that temp.
The whole leg is a great piece to work with because if the drum gets a little more cooking than the thigh? Being connected, it doesn't seem to be a problem to my taster.
Good luck and good smoking.
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- #16
- #17
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I'll give you a bit different view at this... I smoke chicken quarters (that is, leg & thigh) on my WSM 22.5" without brining, on 250F, until internal temperature of 165F, and during the last 15 minutes I glaze them with an apricot glaze: 1/2 cup your favorite BBQ sauce (I make my own - check out my post here ), 4 tbsp honey, 4 tbsp apricot jam. Here's the result.
- #18
I absolutely agree with this method. I do not brine my chicken quarters or thighs due to the short cooking time and they come out just as moist as brined grilled chicken breasts. Glazing takes chicken to a whole different level! Good lookin chicken here!
Hey,I'll give you a bit different view at this... I smoke chicken quarters (that is, leg & thigh) on my WSM 22.5" without brining, on 250F, until internal temperature of 165F, and during the last 15 minutes I glaze them with an apricot glaze: 1/2 cup your favorite BBQ sauce (I make my own - check out my post here ), 4 tbsp honey, 4 tbsp apricot jam. Here's the result.
- #19
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- Joined Mar 3, 2014
Thanks!I absolutely agree with this method. I do not brine my chicken quarters or thighs due to the short cooking time and they come out just as moist as brined grilled chicken breasts. Glazing takes chicken to a whole different level! Good lookin chicken here!
Which reminds me to go get some chicken quarters for the weekend :)
Cheers!
Ed
- #20
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How Long to Smoke Chicken Quarters in Weber Smokey Mountain
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