When i cook a chicken on the Cobb The meat always has a pink hue to it. Today I put 8 Australian heat beads in the Cobb which had gone 3/4 grey,put a 1,880kg chicken at room temperature on the roasting tray, white wine in the moat and turned the chicken over after 1 hour 15 mins then cooked for another 1 hour 15 mins being a total of 2 hours 30 mins.only removing the top the once. I stuck a fork in and what little juice came out was clear.The skin of the chicken was very well done and slightly burnt. The legs were very pink. Not wishing this to be my last meal I put in in the oven at 180 and after 30 mins the legs were still pink and breast was not as bad but had pink tinges here and there, Has anybody else had this problem?
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Thank you for your comments. First the 1.880kg converts to about 4lb which i agree is large and possibly the largest that will fit on the Cobb. Yes I did use a thermometer which should have pointed to not having enough heat beads as the reading did not go above 175 degrees whereas the Cobb thermo lists 190 for poultry.I am assuming from all this that if the temperature at 190 is required the timing would have to be reduced to stop overcooking by say 30 minutes?
We find cooking whole chicken either on our Cobb or Brinkman BBQ(Even Pork has this tinge when we cooked a joint) the colour of the flesh has a pinky tinge. I think this may be due to the chicken is part smoked style cooked especially if the moat is filled with water/wine.
If the temperature is good and the chicken has been on long enough and the juices are clear then it should be ok.We find always the chicken is nice and moist and great tasting.
Quote: Originally posted by tallman on 23/9/2011
1.880kg converts to about 4lb
This is true.
However 1,880kg converts to 4136lb which, as I said earlier is a bit of a big chicken!
------------- Love a lot. Trust a few. But ALWAYS paddle your own canoe!!
Minds are like parachutes:- They only function when they are open!!!
Those who talk don't know.
Those who know don't talk.
.....so I got a comma instead of a full stop. I really did miss the point! However I do think Jake's comments are relevant about meat that is part smoked. The dog and I survived the night after eating some last night and |I have had a cold chicken salad today, It tasted excellent.
Quote: Originally posted by tallman on 23/9/2011.....so I got a comma instead of a full stop. I really did miss the point!
------------- Love a lot. Trust a few. But ALWAYS paddle your own canoe!!
Minds are like parachutes:- They only function when they are open!!!
Those who talk don't know.
Those who know don't talk.
I have just been reading my Cobb recipe book and it states Place a maxium of 275g (9oz) or approx 8-10 briguettes.I normally use 8 or 9 Australian Heat Beads and this to be enough for good 3 hours cooking.
1.5kg or 3lb Chicken to roast, cook time 1 1/2 hours turning after 50minutes and cook first breast side down then turn.
If it is just a pink tinge to the meat, evenly coloured and not blood you should be fine, as long as the juices run clear. A meat thermometer is a good idea if you are uncertain.
Meat does stay very moist on the cobb and often retains a little more colour, due to the way it cooks in a moist smokey environment. The upside is it also keeps more flavour.
Trust me - I'm a chef!
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We've cooked loads of chickens on the Cobb and yes it does look pinky (as does Pork as someone else has said), but we've never been ill with it. We use a cobblestone rather than the beads but that won't matter.