Get Perfectly Crispy Skin on Your Beer Can Chicken

Cooking beer can chicken on your grill or smoker is a great way to make a tasty and juicy roasted chicken. However getting crispy skin can be tricky when using the beer can method. With a few simple tricks, you can get a beautifully browned and crispy skin on your beer can chicken every time.

Why Getting Crispy Skin Can Be Difficult

When you roast a whole chicken, the hot, dry air from the oven helps the skin get crispy and brown. When you make beer can chicken, on the other hand, the chicken sits upright on the can. This keeps the skin from being directly hit with the high heat that makes it crisp.

Additionally, the steam from the beer in the can helps keep the meat very moist and juicy. But unfortunately, this moisture makes getting super crispy skin even more challenging.

Elevate the Chicken Above the Can

One of the best things you can do is elevate the chicken up off the beer can a bit. This allows more hot air to circulate completely around the bird and helps dry out and crisp up the skin better.

Use a poultry stand, a vegetable grill rack, or even crumple up some aluminum foil to sit the chicken upright on the can. Raising it just an inch or two makes a big difference in allowing the skin to crisp up.

Pat the Skin Completely Dry

Before you season and cook your chicken, make sure to pat the skin dry with paper towels. Any extra water on the skin will cause it to steam, which will keep it from getting crispy. Pay extra attention to drying the skin on the bottom of the chicken, as that’s where water tends to gather.

Use Baking Powder

Baking powder is magical when it comes to getting chicken skin extra crispy. Simply sprinkle a light coating all over the skin before applying any oil or seasoning. Let it sit for up to an hour before grilling. The baking powder will help dehydrate the skin so it gets super crispy.

Oil the Skin Generously

Using oil to rub all over the skin helps it brown and crisp. Use an oil with a high smoke point, like peanut, avocado, or grapeseed oil. The oil helps to quickly move heat to the skin and keeps moisture in under the skin. But don’t use too much oil, because too much oil can make the skin dry.

Grill Uncovered First

Try grilling your beer can chicken over direct heat uncovered for the first 20-30 minutes. This high initial heat helps render excess fat under the skin and dries the skin out.

Keep the breast meat facing the grill’s hotter side so it gets nice and crispy. Once it’s crispy, you can move it to indirect heat to finish cooking.

Finish Over Direct Heat

If after indirect cooking the skin still isn’t as crispy as you’d like, move the chicken over direct heat for the last 5-10 minutes of cooking. Watch it carefully to avoid burning. This final blast of heat helps further brown and crisp the skin right before serving.

Remove the Skin While Cooking

If you just can’t seem to get the skin crispy on the grill, you can carefully remove the entire skin once the meat reaches an internal temperature of 140°F.

Place the removed skin directly over the heat on a hot grill grate or pan to crisp up. Then return it to the chicken after cooking for serving.

Use a Poultry Shears

Poultry shears are great for getting into all the nooks and crannies when removing the skin from the meat. The sharper the shears, the cleaner you can cut the skin away without tearing the meat.

Make sure to thoroughly sanitize the shears after using to avoid cross-contamination. And be extremely careful when handling very hot chicken skin straight off the grill.

Let It Rest Before Serving

Be sure to let your chicken rest at least 5-10 minutes once removed from the heat. This allows moisture to redistribute so you don’t lose those delicious juices when carving.

Resting also allows the skin to continue crisping up a bit more after cooking. Just be sure not to let it sit too long or the skin can start to soften.

Use a Crisping Basket

Specialty crisping baskets or racks can help ensure a super crispy skin all over. The mesh design allows for maximum airflow and heat transfer to the skin’s surface.

Simply place the chicken in the basket upright over the beer can on the grill. These baskets can be used along with all the other crisping methods for best results.

Maintain High Grill Temps

Getting the skin crispy requires high, sustained heat on the grill. Make sure to preheat your grill or smoker fully to achieve temperatures between 375-450°F. Use an instant read thermometer to check the actual temps.

Opening the grill repeatedly causes heat loss so try to peek only when necessary. Burning extra wood, charcoal, or turning up the heat on a gas grill can help compensate when needed.

Don’t Use Too Much Beer

While the beer in the can adds lots of flavor, too much can make the skin soggy. Only fill the can about halfway with beer or omit it altogether. Replacing it with wine, broth, or just using an empty can works great.

Apply a Dry Rub

Using a dry seasoning rub all over the skin helps draw out moisture for improved crispiness. Look for rubs without much sugar, which can lead to burning or skin sticking to the grill grate.

Simple dried herbs and spices like garlic powder, onion powder, paprika, and chili powder work wonderfully.

Spray With Oil and Vinegar

Misting the skin periodically while grilling with an equal parts oil and vinegar spray helps promote even browning and crisping. The vinegar helps break down the skin while the oil crisps it up.

Use high smoke point oils like avocado, grapeseed or olive oil. And be sure to spray just a light coating to avoid overly soggy skin.

Deep Frying for Maximum Crispness

Nothing gets skin crispier than deep frying! If you just can’t seem to get the skin crispy enough with other methods, you can actually deep fry the chicken skin after removing it from the meat.

Fry small pieces at around 375°F just until crispy, about 2-3 minutes. Drain on paper towels before enjoying these irresistibly crunchy chicken cracklings.

Getting beautifully browned, crunchy skin on your beer can chicken just takes a little extra effort. Allowing for maximum air circulation, drying the skin well, using baking powder, and cranking up the heat are all effective ways to crisp up the skin. With the right techniques, you’ll have the best of both worlds – tender, juicy meat and an insanely crispy skin.

how do you get crispy skin on beer can chicken

What is the best beer for beer can chicken recipes?

I like to keep it light and cheap when it comes to a beer can chicken recipe. Some people like to use Miller Light or Budweiser, but I am partial to my favorite inexpensive cans of beer like Montucky Cold Snack or PBR. Try to avoid beer with special flavorings like seasonal pumpkin beers or anything you wouldn’t want imparting its flavor on the chicken.

Beer Can Chicken Variations

  • You can change the rub in any way you want because the beer is the main attraction here. Brown sugar, paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, and pepper can be used to make a simple rub. You can add different spices, like cumin, coriander, or turmeric, or chopped fresh herbs, like oregano, parsley, or tarragon.
  • You don’t have to use beer to make this chicken recipe from a beer can on the grill. Instead, try it with cider, which goes well with chicken, or canned white wine. Otherwise, use a nonalcoholic beer or another nonalcoholic drink like apple juice, coke, ginger ale, or ginger ale.

The Best Smoked Beer Can Chicken with Crispy Skin.

FAQ

How to get super crispy roast chicken skin?

How I Tested Methods To Get Crispy Chicken SkinDry the bird with paper towels, then roast. Rub with baking powder mixture. Air-dry for 24 hours. Air-dry and baste during roasting.

What is a good rub for beer can chicken?

In a medium bowl, mix together the paprika, garlic powder, coriander, cumin, black pepper, and cayenne pepper. Also mix in the dry mustard and onion powder. Store in an airtight container if not using right away.

Why didn’t my chicken skin get crispy?

When you take a chicken out of the oven, the skin will be rubbery because it was cooked with water. The key is to managing the moisture before placing it in the oven. Too much (or any) moisture will steam the chicken instead of roasting it.

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