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Beer Can Chicken is one of my all-time favorites for chicken on the grill. I certainly didn’t invent it…the recipes are everywhere. But I was always skeptical that the beer can approach was really just a gimmick…until I tried it.

This is absolutely, positively the most succulent chicken you will ever prepare on a grill! The beer bastes the chicken from the inside, and because the chicken is roasted vertically, all the fat just drips away.

What about the kids? The alcohol in the beer fully evaporates of course, leaving just wonderfully moist and flavorful chicken…without any drunken children!

Beer Can Chicken

1 whole chicken, 4 to 5 lb.
1 tablespoon kosher salt
2 tablespoons dry spice rub* or prepared grill seasoning
1 tablespoon oil or cooking spray
1 can beer (16 oz.)

Remove the neck and giblets from the chicken cavity and set aside. Remove any excess fat, then rinse the chicken and dry inside and out with paper towels. Coat the chicken with oil, then rub on the salt and spice mix, covering the inside, outside, and in between the skin and breast meat.

Open a can of beer and pour half into a glass (for later consumption!). Place the chicken over the beer can and transfer to the grill, positioning the can and legs like a tripod to support the chicken upright. Cook on indirect medium for about 1 hour and 15 minutes, or until an instant-read thermometer placed between the thigh and breast registers 165 degrees. Remove the chicken from the grill and place in a shallow pan to rest for 10 minutes. Lift the chicken from the can and cut into serving pieces. (Reserve the carcass for another use, like next week’s recipe!)

*A simple mix: 2 tablespoons each paprika and brown sugar, 1 tablespoon ground black pepper.

Try different dry rubs for variety; just look for more recipes in your favorite grilling book. If you have extra rub, pour a tablespoonful into the beer before cooking for even more flavor. And for the faint-hearted, you can even buy a stand to support the beer can if you don’t mind one more piece of equipment in the kitchen!

While the chicken cools, grill the corn on the cob and take the Zucchini, Apple and Raisin Slaw out of the refrigerator. Dinner is served!

Find more of Dr. Pat’s recipes in Healthy Lifestyle

Pasta night? This week make a savory chicken pasta dish using different varieties of flavored chicken sausage. You won’t have to fix two separate meals for dinner if you want to serve something that is too spicy for the kids… pasta makes it easy to improvise. 

The key ingredient here is flavored chicken sausage. Look for Aidell’s in stores or Sausages by Amylu  in stores and on line. They both have amazing combinations that pack a lot of flavor, like sun-dried tomato and basil or apple and gouda.

Sauté veggies in two pans and add simple ingredients to one pan and more spicy additions to the other. Serve both pasta dishes side by side and the younger set may surprise you with their preferences!

Pasta Duets: Savory Chicken and Pasta (Hot and Not)

Heat the water for the pasta. Saute a chopped onion in olive oil until translucent, then add a cup of chopped leftover veggies, like green beans or asparagus.

Split the veggies between two pans and in one, heat slices of precooked chicken sausage (try Aidell’s Habanero and Green Chili, or Amylu’s Andouille if you like heat ), add 2 tablespoons tomato paste, 1 cup of chicken broth, a splash of white wine, and a teaspoon of crushed dried herbs (Italian blend or sweet basil). In the other pan of veggies, add slices of mild chicken sausage or shredded cooked chicken, 1 tablespoon of tomato paste, 1 cup of chicken broth and a sprinkling of dried thyme.

Simmer both sauces while the pasta cooks. Cook bite-sized pieces of additional fresh vegetables (like broccoli) by just tossing them in to boil with the pasta during the last 2 to 3 minutes. Drain the pasta (along with the veggies you added to the cooking water).

Now remove the two sauces from the heat, and mix half of the pasta and veggies into each. Sprinkle with fresh minced parsley and plenty of grated cheese.

The sausages freeze well right in the package, so you can have a home cooked entrée in the time it takes to cook pasta.  Have fun sampling the different varieties to create an entirely new dish every week (or skip the meat and double the veggies for a classic vegetarian pasta). Have even more fun finishing up the extra sausage links on another night by making this recipe for Chicken Sausages with Onions, Peppers and Potatoes.

Coming soon…“kid pastas” that adults love.

Check out other recipes by Dr. Pat in Healthy Lifestyle


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