🔥 Free · 2 Minutes

What Kind of Man Are You?

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Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1.5-2 hours
Servings 4-6 servings

Ingredients

THE BIRD
THE RUB
THE BINDER
WOOD

Instructions

  1. Prep the beer can. Open the beer and drink half (or pour into a glass and drink it). The half-full can goes into the smoker. You can add extra flavor by seasoning the inside beer: drop in a few garlic cloves, a sprig of thyme, and a pinch of the rub. The steam from the beer rises inside the bird and bastes it from the center out.
  2. Prepare the chicken. Pull the bird from the fridge 30 minutes before cooking. Pat completely dry with paper towels, inside and out. Any moisture on the skin prevents the bark from forming. Truss the legs together with kitchen twine and tuck the wing tips behind the breast.
  3. Apply the binder and rub. Rub the bird down with a thin layer of oil. Mix all rub ingredients and apply generously to every surface: top, bottom, under the skin of the breast (loosen the skin with your fingers and push rub directly onto the meat), and inside the cavity. The rub is what builds the bark and flavor on the skin.
  4. Position the bird. Place the chicken upright on the beer can, inserting the can into the cavity. The can acts as a standing roasting rack and a flavor delivery system. Balance the bird on the can so it sits stable on the smoker grates. Use a rib rack or beer can chicken roaster if your smoker grates are too wide.
  5. Smoke at 325°F over cherry wood. This is hotter than a typical long smoke because the goal is crispy skin, not deep smoke penetration. Cherry wood is the classic choice for poultry: mild, sweet, and complimentary. Place the bird in the center of the smoker and close the lid.
  6. Cook until the breast hits 160°F. At 325°F, a 4-5 lb bird takes approximately 1.5-2 hours. Insert a leave-in thermometer into the thickest part of the breast, not touching bone. Target 160°F in the breast. The thigh should read 165°F+. The skin should be deep mahogany, dry, and crackling.
  7. Check and rotate at the halfway point. At 45-60 minutes, check the skin color. If one side is browning faster, rotate the bird 180 degrees. This is not about opening the smoker constantly; one mid-cook check is fine.
  8. Rest before carving. Remove the bird from the smoker and set it aside. Pull the can out carefully (it is hot). Tent loosely with foil and rest for 15 minutes. The internal temp will climb to 165°F during the rest. Carve and serve, spooning any drippings from the cavity over the sliced meat.

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