Chicken

Smoked Chicken Wings

It’s getting to be that time of year again, the time when football is all everyone talks about in Tennessee and there’s not one person in our house that complains about it! And it doesn’t matter if it’s Hendersonville High School, college, or pro football, one of the best foods to go along with it is Buffalo Wings! My wife and I love eating wings and having some cold beers to wash it down on Sunday afternoons while we watch whatever game happens to be on the TV, so it was only natural to try out some wings on the smoker!

For my first batch of wings on the smoker I decided to use 3 different rubs. The first rub is my stand-by for smoking chicken breasts, the second rub is what I use on just about everything else, and the third rub was one i made out of a cookbook. I split about 10lbs of full wings into three groups and seasoned each group accordingly.

First batch of wings on the Weber Smokey Mountain Cooker along with some smoked jalapeño sausage!

After getting the WSM up to a consistent 250 degrees I placed them on the smoker and placed a couple of chunks of apple wood on the charcoal for flavor. 90 minutes later, this is what they looked like.

I took the jalapeño sausages and bacon wrapped pork tips off the grate and took them inside for an appetizer. Seriously, that sausage can be a meal all by itself!! Then I took the chicken wings and grate out of the middle section of the Weber Smokey Mountain Cooker, took the middle section out, and placed the grate and wings on top of the bottom portion with the coals to crisp up the skin on the wings. My tastebuds won out, however, I took the wings off after only 5 minutes and they didn’t crisp up to our liking. But they sure were delicious!

My wife and I couldn’t tell much difference between my stand-by rub and the rub I made up from the cookbook (2nd and 3rd rubs mentioned above) other than one was slightly spicier than the other. We did, however, notice a big difference between those two and the first rub mentioned above. Obviously it wasn’t spicy but had a real good smokey chicken flavor. Combined with my homemade BBQ sauce it was our pick as our favorite!

Wings with a coating of my standard chicken rub and 2 hours worth of smoke.

So today I decided to try another batch using just the chicken rub, and I decided to let them smoke 30 minutes longer, and this is what they looked like! I then used the same method as the first attempt to crisp them up by placing the wings and grate directly above the coals. I smothered all but the five wings on the left with my BBQ sauce and let them sit for 7 or 8 minutes. I then flipped them over and let them sit another 7 or 8 minutes and then placed them on a baking pan and took them inside.

 

The BBQ sauce burned up a little bit (ok, maybe more than a little) but the flavor was amazing!! We have decided that this is a method that we’ll use again but I will only apply the BBQ sauce about 5 minutes before they come off so that they don’t get burned up as bad. And with football getting into full swing next weekend I’m already excited to smoke more chicken wings!

Wings after 15 minutes directly above the charcoal to crisp up the skin. Notice the 5 on the left that didn't get any BBQ sauce?

Latest Notes

First Pork Ribs Experiment

Pork ribs! Just hearing it said out loud can make your mouth water with thoughts of messy deliciousness sticking to your fingers as you bite into one of the best meats to ever to be kissed by smoke! According to my wife ribs are one of nature’s most perfect foods, along with potatoes, so it was only a matter of time before I had to try my hand at cooking them in my Weber Smokey Mountain, and the time was now!

Pork Ribs given a heavy coat of dry rub before wrapping!

I went to Sam’s Club and picked up a package of pork loin ribs, brought them home, and coated them up with a heavy coat of dry rub. I then covered them in aluminum foil and placed them in the refrigerator while I prepped the WSM.

For pork I love to use hickory chunks! It gives the meat such a wonderful flavor and I figured if it works for packaged bacon, it has to be good for ribs, shoulders, and tenderloins because after all, smoke is just another ingredient in BBQ! I’ve discovered that soaking the wood chunks in water for an hour or more provides the best smoke to cook with. The soaked wood obviously takes longer to burn which makes the smoke last a little longer.

Three racks of ribs, rubbed and ready for smoke!

Once I had the WSM up to a consistent 225 degrees, I added the wood chunks and placed the three racks of ribs on grates. Weber makes rib racks (which I picked up at Home Depot) and they work great for placing on the smoker. They definitely save space so that all three racks of ribs could go on the top grate.

After 2 and half hours, I took the lid off the smoker to take look. They looked amazing, and the meat was just starting to shrink away from the rib bone so I decided to give them a good heavy bath in homemade BBQ sauce. An hour past and I knew that they were just about finished so I gave them another coat of BBQ sauce, replaced the lid, and waited another 15 minutes before I took them off the grate.

Smothered in BBQ sauce after 4 hours of smoke!

My mouth was watering as I took them into the kitchen and began cutting them into manageable pieces. I had to sneak a bite (one of the benefits of cutting up the meat, right?!) and I’m pretty sure my eyes rolled to the back of my head! At the dinner table, I knew my biggest challenge was to impress my wife. As she took the first couple of bites she said “Wow! These are spicy!” I, too, had noticed that there was a little zing to them, but I have a higher tolerance for spicy foods than she does, so I didn’t think much about it. But the more she ate, the hotter the spice became! That didn’t stop her from eating them, we just agreed to take the spices down in my BBQ sauce and not use so much rub on the next batch of ribs I smoke.

Ready to eat! Look at that smoke ring!

The weirdest thing, however, was when we both ate them the next day (I love leftovers!) and we both agreed that the ribs tasted perfect, not spicy at all! I’m not sure why that happened, why the spice cooled off the next day, but it’s definitely something that I’m going to have to experiment with and find out what made this batch of ribs so hot. And honestly, I can’t wait to try again!!