What Temperature Should Chicken Thighs Be Grilled To For Perfectly Cooked Meat?

Today on the ThermoWorks blog we’re honored to host Cameron Treu, owner of Bam Bam’s BBQ in Orem, Utah and competitive pitmaster. We love eating anything from his restaurant and he loves using our thermometers, so we thought we’d have a chat with him and let you in on some of his secrets.

For this post, Bam Bam let us in on his tips for competition-winning BBQ chicken thighs, as well as two other methods for prepping them and talks about how he uses his Thermapen® to temp them just right, no matter the method.

Bam Bam talked with us about the importance of getting the chicken right in barbecue competitions. “Chicken is the fastest cook and the first turn-in time,” he says. And that means that it can be a big stressor towards the end of the competition. Even though chicken thighs are used a lot more than breasts, they come with some problems that you need to solve to win.

“Competition BBQ is about one bite,” Bam Bam says. The judges have a lot to eat and aren’t going to take more than one bite from each tray, so you have only one bite to get the best score from each judge. However, chicken thighs have a lot of extra fat that you don’t like on the meat, as well as some grisly bits and skin that can be bumpy and chewy.

Compound these anatomical difficulties with some pretty narrow temperature margins, and you have a meat that can baffle even the best pitmasters.

(Why chicken thigh? The dark and the light meat in chicken cook in fundamentally different ways. Light meat is lean and naturally tender, while the dark meat of the wings, legs, and thighs is fattier and more full of connective tissue—especially collagen. That’s why it can be so difficult to hit the sweet spot between rubbery and dry. ).

Chicken thighs are a flavorful, juicy, and budget-friendly cut of meat that is perfect for grilling. With the right technique you can achieve tender, mouthwatering chicken thighs with an irresistible charred exterior. One of the keys to grilling chicken thighs correctly is knowing what temperature to cook them to. Undercooked chicken can be dangerous, while overcooking leads to dry rubbery meat. So what is the ideal internal temperature for grilled chicken thighs?

Why Temperature Matters When Grilling Chicken

Cooking chicken safely is all about reaching the proper internal temperature. Chicken can contain harmful bacteria like salmonella, so it needs to be cooked hot enough to kill any pathogens that may be present.

According to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), chicken should be cooked to an internal temperature of 165°F to eliminate illness-causing germs. This applies to all cuts of chicken, including boneless chicken thighs.

You can only be sure that your chicken thighs are cooked to the safe 165°F level with a thermometer. Color and texture cues aren’t always accurate because they change depending on things like marinades, whether the meat is bone-in or boneless, and how the grill is set up. Getting a good digital instant-read thermometer will give you peace of mind that your chicken is cooked right.

Monitoring temperature also prevents overcooking. Chicken dries out rapidly once it exceeds 165°F. Chicken thighs without bones or skin should be cooked to 165°F for the best balance of juicy, tender meat and dry, stringy flesh.

Why Chicken Thighs Can Be Tricky

While white meat chicken breasts are prone to drying out, chicken thighs contain more fat and connective tissue. This allows them to stay juicier at higher temperatures. Many chefs actually recommend taking bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs up to 175-180°F for the ultimate in tender, fall-off-the-bone texture.

However experts caution against one-size-fits-all temperature guidelines. The optimum internal temp depends on your desired finished texture and how the thighs are prepared.

For example, boneless skinless thighs cooked directly over high heat will dry out faster than bone-in thighs or thighs protected by a sauce or marinade. Thighs that will be sauced or chopped after cooking can also be taken to a higher temperature than thighs being served whole.

This variability means checking temperature early and often is key. For boneless skinless thighs, 165°F is a safe bet to remain juicy while eliminating safety concerns. Bone-in and marinated thighs have more leeway to go to 175°F or beyond. Use your thermometer as your guide.

Grilling Tips for Perfectly Cooked Chicken Thighs

Follow these simple tips for grilling chicken thighs to the ideal internal temperature:

  • Marinate: Marinades add flavor and moisture to chicken. Soak the chicken thighs in the sauce for at least 30 minutes, or even overnight.

  • Pat Dry: Blot thighs with paper towels before grilling. This helps promot browning and prevents steaming.

  • Use Direct Heat: Cook over direct high heat, around 400-450°F. This sears the outside and cooks thighs quickly.

  • Flip Frequently: Flipping every 2-3 minutes evenly cooks both sides while creating a beautiful char.

  • Check Temperature Early: Test temperature after thighs have cooked for 6-8 minutes. This prevents overcooking.

  • Rest: Let the thighs rest for 5 to 10 minutes before serving. The temperature will rise 5-10°F during this time.

  • Look For 165°F: For boneless skinless thighs, pull them at 165°F for ideal doneness. Bone-in and marinated can go up to 175°F.

Recipes for Grilled Chicken Thighs

These tasty recipes result in flawlessly cooked chicken thighs every time when using a thermometer:

Easy Grilled Chicken Thighs

  • 1 lb boneless, skinless chicken thighs
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tbsp fresh rosemary, chopped
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  1. Combine olive oil, garlic, rosemary, salt, and pepper in a mixing bowl. Add chicken and turn to coat. Let marinate 30 minutes up to overnight.
  2. Preheat grill to 400-450°F. Pat chicken dry with paper towels. Discard marinade.
  3. Grill thighs over direct heat for 6-8 minutes per side, flipping occasionally, until 165°F.
  4. Let rest 5 minutes before serving.

BBQ Chicken Thighs

  • 1 lb boneless, skinless chicken thighs
  • 1/2 cup barbecue sauce
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 2 tsp chili powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  1. Combine barbecue sauce, brown sugar, chili powder, paprika, salt, and pepper in a mixing bowl. Add chicken and turn to coat. Marinate 30 minutes to overnight.
  2. Preheat grill to 400-450°F. Pat chicken dry with paper towels.
  3. Grill thighs over direct heat for 6-8 minutes per side, flipping frequently, until 165°F.
  4. During last 2 minutes of grilling, glaze thighs with some of the barbecue sauce.
  5. Let rest 5 minutes before serving.

Get Perfectly Cooked Chicken Thighs Every Time

Cooking chicken thighs on the grill can feel like a guessing game. But using a thermometer removes the guesswork and guarantees safe, properly cooked meat. For boneless skinless thighs, target an internal temperature of 165°F.

With the right techniques like marinating, frequent flipping, and monitoring temperature, you can achieve tender, juicy chicken thighs with a flavorful char. Ditch the poking and prodding – let your thermometer be your guide to grilling chicken thighs with confidence.

what temperature should chicken thighs be grilled to

How to trim chicken for BBQ gold

To get best results with chicken thighs, you need to trim them.

Bam Bam talks about three levels of trimming, based on how hard you want to work and how good you want the results to be. He calls them after different people and the *ahem* esteem given to each person.

  • The Mother-in-law level is the easiest and requires the least work to make good chicken.
  • When you’re neighbors, you have to put in a little more work and be more careful.
  • New Girlfriend/Boss gets the most show-off effort. This is the level that Bam Bam wins at events.

Let’s examine them each in turn.

It’s easy to make the mother-in-law rub: put it on the bottom of the thigh, then flip it over and put it on the skin on the top. Then grab the corners of the meat and skin that lay flabbily on the table. Fold the skin under the thigh, trying to leave no prints in the rub. Quickly trim any loose bits off, if you like. It’s quick, it’s easy, it won’t win any awards … but it still looks pretty nice and by tucking the skin under, you make the piece more uniform so that it cooks better.

If you want to make a better chicken thigh, maybe for a neighborhood cookout, but don’t have time to do the full competition prep on every thigh, Bam Bam says to go one or two steps further than for the Mother-in-law.

First, he says, pull the skin as far off the thigh as you can. It will stick along a seam of fat, so slice through that seam gently with a sharp knife to free the skin completely. With the skin removed, “cut anything off the meat itself that you aren’t going to eat,” he says.

Bam Bam trims off the fatty bits that cling to the meat. With the short length of this cook, he says, you won’t be rendering any blobs like that.

Once those bits have been trimmed, lay the joint out on the cutting board and trim any meat off that extends beyond the knuckle of the leg bone, squaring off the edge of the meat for a cleaner presentation.

The skin also gets a little more treatment in the Neighbor trim: Spread it out and, with your knife at a nearly flat angle, trim any high spots off of the fatty side by keeping the blade moving and letting the edge to the work so you don’t tear the skin. Cut it so that it is uniform and squared off on all sides. You don’t want to cut too much of the skin off, though. Bam Bam warns that the skin will shrink during cooking, so you want enough to be left that you can rewrap the chicken with a little bit of overlap on the bottom side.

what temperature should chicken thighs be grilled to

Before rewrapping, you need to season the meat. Season both sides of the meat with a good rub.

Bam Bam uses this step as an opportunity to layer flavors by using more than one rub—one on the meat and another on the skin. “Keep it simple though,” he says. “Make sure the rubs you use work together. A lot of guys do too much fiddling with it.” If using a sweet rub, Bam Bam recommends layering it under the skin to minimize the risk of burning the sugars.

Once the meat is seasoned, wrap the thigh in skin, tuckingit together on the bottom. “Some guys use toothpicks to hold it together,” hesays. “Some guys even use meat glue”—his eyes roll and he scoffs—“but the day Ineed to use meat glue to compete, I’m done.” He simply lets the skin adhere tothe meat, knowing there will be some shrinkage.

Trim away the extra skin so that when it is re-wrapped onto the meat there is enough to cover the edible portion and overlap just a little bit. With the skin in place, season the piece lightly again, being careful to avoid smudging the rub.

what temperature should chicken thighs be grilled to

This method gives you uniform, nice, even chicken with nogristly bits to interrupt your enjoyment. Certainly something you’d be proud toserve your neighbors. But there is yet one more level of chicken BBQ perfectionto achieve…

Competition trim starts like the neighbor trim by removing the skin completely from the thigh. When prepping for a competition, Bam Bam emphasizes that just because this piece of skin came from this thigh doesn’t mean it has to go back on this thigh. If a large thigh has barely enough skin to cover it and a small thigh has way too much, go ahead and trade skins around.

With the skins removed, Bam Bam’s next move is to “knockdown the high spots” with his knife laid almost perfectly flat against theskin. You need a very sharp knife to avoid tearing the tender skin, he says. Hepoints out that chicken skin itselfis quite translucent, letting a good deal of light through. If your skin isquite opaque then it has a lot of fat on it. Bam Bam does not recommendscraping all of that fat off, only the high spots, but he has a trick forgetting crisp, un-flabby skin that we’ll come to later.

Once the skins are taken care of, trim the meat. Remove the same fatty and gristly bits that we removed for the Neighbor cut, and square off the meat along the sides. If there are any obvious veins in the meat, trim them out with a sharp knife, and inspect the chicken for anything that could be seen as interrupting a ‘perfect’ bite.

To make a more uniform piece, and to make pieces that aresmall enough to fit six to a box for the judges, Bam Bam cuts the knuckle ofthe thigh bone off. “Find this little line of fat,” he says, and cut theknuckle off along that line. “Some guys use garden shears, me, I just…” (atthis point Bam Bam placed the knife edge where he wanted to cut the bone, andpounded the spine with his other hand, popping the knuckle clean off.)

While preparing the thighs for actual cooking, Bam Bamtalked a little bit about competitions and judging. Emphasizing the “one-bite” judging thathappens, he holds up a thigh, demonstrating that there is a meatier side of thebone and a less meaty side. “I’ll put that side facing the judges,” he says.Most people, he says, just pick it up and take a bite without turning it aroundor anything, so that first bite can be improved by positioning it correctly inthe turn-in box.

To make sure the very best chicken gets turned in, he says that he’ll cook 10–12 thighs if six are to be turned in. That way the best looking, best-done pieces can be used. But, he says, “if it’s cooked right and tastes good, you’re gonna beat 80% of the competition … taste is the biggest score” on the scorecard.

To season the pieces, Bam Bam will hold each piece in one hand while sprinkling rub with the other, moving both around to get even, light coverage. He then wraps the thighs in skin and seasons them again in the same way, being extra careful not to smudge the rub.

what temperature should chicken thighs be grilled to

The result is a rectangular, compact, completely uniform piece of chicken that is going to cook evenly and present nothing but perfection on the first bite. The competition style is the most compact, the most even

Beginners Guide to Grilling Chicken Thighs

FAQ

What temperature is grilled chicken thighs done?

A temperature of 165°F (74°C) inside grilled chicken thighs is usually enough to make sure they are fully cooked and safe to eat. Some prefer to cook them to 170-175°F (77-79°C) for a more tender texture due to the breakdown of connective tissue.

Are chicken thighs done at 165?

Yes, chicken thighs are safe to eat when they reach an internal temperature of 165°F (74°C).

What temperature do chicken thighs be fully cooked at?

Chicken thighs should be cooked to an internal temperature of 165°F. The best way to temp boneless chicken thighs is to insert an instant-read thermometer into the thickest part of the thigh.

Is chicken done at 165 or 180?

Chicken is typically cooked to an internal temperature of 165°F (74°C). This temperature ensures that any harmful bacteria like Salmonella are killed, making the chicken safe to eat.

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