Cookbook:Chicken Barbecue Sauce
Chicken Barbecue Sauce | |
---|---|
Category | Sauce recipes |
Yield | 6 tablespoons (90 mL) |
Servings | 2 |
Time | 5 minutes |
Difficulty |
Cookbook | Recipes | Ingredients | Equipment | Techniques | Cookbook Disambiguation Pages | Recipes | Sauce
This chicken barbecue sauce is a tomato based sauce used as marinade or barbecue sauce for grilled chicken parts such as wings, drumsticks or breasts. It also works very well for vegetarian (e.g., wheat- and soy-based) meat alternatives. It was invented by Johan Zandin from Gothenburg, Sweden and mixes 9 different ingredients from Europe, Asia and North America.
Ingredients
edit- 2 tablespoons (30 mL) peanut oil
- 1 teaspoon (5 mL) walnut oil
- 2 tablespoons (30 mL) mild chili sauce (the kind just slightly hotter than ketchup)
- 1 teaspoon (5 mL) Worcestershire sauce (see below for vegetarian alternative)
- 1 teaspoon (5 mL) teriyaki marinade
- 2 teaspoons (10 mL) tandoori powder
- 2 mL ground white pepper
- 2 mL herbal salt
- 1 small, dried, crunched piri-piri chile pepper
Procedure
edit- Mix everything together in a small mixing bowl.
- Use a brush to apply a thick layer of the sauce to your favorite chicken parts or vegetarian alternative.
- Barbecue chicken over fire, charcoal or in the oven.
Notes, tips and variations
edit- The sauce can also be used as a marinade: Soak the chicken parts in it, for half an hour to a few hours.
- Any remaining sauce can be applied with the brush during the cooking.
- In case of allergies or problems to find some ingredient, most ingredients can be replaced by similar alternatives:
- Peanut oil → sunflower oil, corn oil or any other neutral oil
- Walnut oil → sesame oil
- Mild chili sauce → ketchup or tomato purée
- Worcestershire sauce → HP sauce
- Teriyaki marinade → soy sauce
- Herbal salt → plain salt
- Piri-piri → any other hot chili pepper
Warnings
edit- Make sure that any sauce that has been in contact with raw chicken gets properly heated. So do not apply more sauce just before taking the chicken from the heat or use the sauce uncooked after you have dipped the brush in it.
- Note that Worcestershire sauce usually is non-vegetarian, since at least the original recipe contains anchovies. (See above for alternative.)