
We’re a bit nervous cooking chicken from raw on the barbecue but it’s fine so long as you take your time. You also need to cook the wings before you brush on the glaze. This is so they don’t burn on the outside before cooking all the way through.
Start a day ahead with the brine and you’ll have the perfect party dish for the barbecue. Oh, and you’ll need napkins.
Wine Suggestion: With such big, burly flavours on the glaze and in the spirit of a fun, messy dish we’d suggest a similar style of red wine to match. Zinfandel, Grenache or similar. Tonight Pikes Los Compañeros, a juicy, Shiraz-Tempranillo blend from the Clare Valley. Brambles and plums with a cool kick of spice on the finish. A new barbecue favourite.
BBQ Chicken Wings with Korean Glaze – serves 4-6
- 20 large chicken wings, jointed in 2 (get your butcher to prep these for you)
- 200g table salt
- 2 litres of water
- 10 black peppercorns
- 4 bay leaves
FOR THE GLAZE:
- 80ml rice vinegar
- 60g caster sugar
- 50ml Sriracha hot sauce
- 50ml tomato ketchup
- 2 tbsp gochujang chilli paste
- 2 tbsp sesame oil
- 20g butter
FOR GARNISH:
- 2-3 scallions (green parts only), shredded
- 1 tbsp toasted sesame seeds
To make the brine, put the salt into a large bowl, then add the water and whisk until the salt disolves. Add the bay leaves, peppercorns and chicken wings. Cover the bowl and leave overnight in the fridge.
When you’re ready to cook, remove the wings from the brine and pat dry with kitchen paper.
Make the glaze by putting all of the ingredients into a small pan and bringing to a simmer. Cook, stirring for about 5 minutes, then set aside until needed.
Put the chicken wings onto a hot barbecue and cook for 10-12 minutes or until browing on both sides. Now coat the chicken wings with the glaze using a pastry brush. Cook for another few minutes, turning, until slightly charred.
Put the chickin wings onto a large warm platter, then brush generously with extra glaze and rest for a minute before serving. Scatter over the shredded scallions and toasted sesame seeds and eat with your hands.
(Original recipe from Outdoor Cooking by Tom Kerridge, Bloomsbury Absolute, 2021.)
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