Have you ever cooked a chicken breast that turned out dry? Think most of us have and it’s my #1 reason to order dark meat at unknown joints. Today my friend is the day we aim to break dry or tough grill chicken dinner disasters. Keep reading
Most the time you’ll see me lighting up chicken tenders which come with their own set of fixable problems. This recipe is about the chicken breast. The breast come in all different sizes pretty much small (young bird), medium (youngish bird), large (old bird), and too huge (pterodactyl bird). There are vast differences from chicken farmer to farmer. Try not to pick the huge breast, its often a tough old bird. I do my quick brine a little weak, and you can add any flavoring you like. Of course, this is for the Cottonmouth. Most brine calls for 1/4 cup (4 tbs) of salt. Mine is usually a frog's hair lower at three tbs.
Mix the brine ingredients (water, salt, Cottonmouth)well in large enough bowl to also accommodate the chicken.
Cut your chicken breast in half long ways.
On a solid surface lay a piece of handi-wrap out, put 2 pieces of chicken on the wrap, and add another piece of wrap over the top. Ziplock bags work too.
With a meat cleaver pound out the chicken breast mostly on the thick side to match the thins thickness.
Add the pounded chicken to the brine, cover, and set in the fridge.
Remainder Steps
Get your grill going to medium-high heat (375° to 400°).
In a saucepan at medium heat (325° to 350°) add the 2 tbs butter, bell peppers, garlic, and salt.
When peppers begin to sweat, add in the mushrooms until they are at your desired doneness.
Set veggies to the side or make them with the chickens next steps.
Drain brine from chicken. Pat dry to prevent raw chicken drips.
Add all the breast pieces to grill off the heat. Add as many ciabatta rolls you can
Keeping an eye on the grill each side for 6 minutes (safe) or 5 minutes if you know your grill. Six minutes usually guarantee grill marks.