Yucatan grilled chicken. A little bit of sunshine next time you grill. Big, bold, bright tastes. Citrus. Achiote. Chili. Mustard. Garlic. What’s not to love?
It’s dead easy as well. Just combine all the ingredients in the blender. Marinate the chicken. Grill. Smile.
This is the stuff of roadside Mom and Pop grills in Southern California. El Pollo this or El Pollo that. If you’ve been, you know what I’m talking about.
If you haven’t – just make this. It’ll be like you were there. It is absolutely addictive stuff. Even when it’s bad, it’s pretty good. And when it’s good, it’s awesome.
Achiote makes Yucatan grilled chicken special
If you don’t live close to Mexico you will need to make a trip to a latin market. The secret ingredient is a paste called Achiote. It’s pronounced “achot” so if you have to ask for it try to say it that way. So they won’t look at you like you are crazy.
It has annatto seed in it. That’s the stuff they use to colour cheese. You think turmeric stains? Watch out. Don’t say you weren’t warned.
Grab a pure chili powder like New Mexican while you are there. Grab lots. Not just for this recipe. Pure chili powders are just so much better than the crap called “chili powder” in grocery stores. That’s a blend of spices. Doesn’t matter what you cook with it. It all winds up tasting the same. Just not good.
Once you have that, the rest is easy. Some garlic, some citrus. Some mustard. Puree it all up. Toss the chicken in the marinade. Let it sit for a while. And then grill.
Grilling technique is key
This is skin-on chicken. Plan for an indirect fire. You don’t want to be fighting major flare-ups. Finish it direct to get a bit of char. Charcoal is true to the Mom and Pop grills. When you taste their Yucatan grilled chicken you’ll know it’s true.
Gas will do – just won’t have the depth of flavour. Maybe plan for some wood chips if you’re cooking with gas.
Try Yucatan grilled chicken next time you’re planning a party. Maybe some tortillas and pinto beans on the side. Your guests will love it.
yucatan grilled chicken
Ingredients
- 6-7 cloves garlic
- 2 Tbsp yellow prepared mustard
- 1 Tbsp achiote paste
- Juice of a large lime
- 2 Tbsp mild pure chili powder - like New Mexican or Ancho
- 1 Tbsp salt
- enough water to make a smooth paste - roughly 3/4-1 cup
- 1 chicken - cut into 8-10 pieces (or individual parts to your taste)
Instructions
Prepare the chicken
- Combine all the ingredients except the chicken in a blender. Puree until smooth.
- Place the chicken and marinade in a non-reactive dish and let stand 1-3 hours.
Grill the chicken
- Prepare your grill for medium-high indirect heat. Place a drip pan over the portion of the grill not heated to catch the drippings. If you are using a gas grill, place some pre-soaked wood chips in a foil packet and pierce. Place the foil packet over a lit burner.
- If using charcoal build a banked fire on one side of the grill. Place the drip pan on the other side.
- Grill, indirect, until an instant read thermometer reads about 155-160F.
- Start rotating pieces over the direct heat (2 or 3 pieces at a time) to get a bit of colour or char. Once they have coloured up, return them to the indirect area. Repeat until all the pieces are done. Pay close attention when you do this.
- Continue cooking until an instant read thermometer reads 165F in the thickest part of the chicken pieces.
- Serve with pinto beans, tortillas, and pico.
Used this recipe last night and have to say I’d proudly serve this to anyone from the Yucatan peninsula. The only recommendation I would make is during the last fifteen minutes I squeezed fresh line juice on each piece and salted with finely grounded sea salt. This really brought out the flavor. I will most definitely be serving this during the next large gathering.
Great tips. Thanks!
Made this for company yesterday. SO easy and everyone wants the recipe. For a side dish I made a Mexican Potato Salad (a Martha Stewart recipe) that was delicious and also simple—lime juice, mayo, minced chipotle peppers in adobo sauce.
Thanks again Glebekitchen! Your recipes are so interesting and always turn out beautifully.
Pat – thank you for saying so and for sticking with me since pretty much the beginning!
Now that summer is almost over, I really need to start grilling more before I start getting all grumpy about the Canadian winters. haha I am definitely going to try this out! Great tip about the staining of the achiote paste! I recently worked with annatto seeds and stained my light coloured clothing -_- now it looks like I have pee pee stains on my clothes haha! 🙂
Annatto is famous for staining everything! Hope you find time to pull your grill out before the snow flies.
this is so delicious ,i have tried it and the chicken was so juicy ,the real Mexican flavor came into my house
Albert, I’m so glad you liked it and thank you for taking the time to comment!
Hi Glebe,
I am going to make this for guests next week. Am wondering how to serve it. You mention beans, pico de gallo and tortillas. Are people to wrap the chicken in the tortillas? Can you recommend a way to serve the beans? You don’t mean refried, I assume?
Hi Pat,
For beans I like these ones – charro beans.
Tortillas – they can make little tacos or not. It’s a free form sort of meal around here. I like corn tortillas. Pico is just good with everything and decent tomatoes are finally starting to arrive!