Barbecued Chicken

5 from 3 votes

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For summer entertaining, when in doubt, barbecued chicken is always the answer. Plus, this tangy, savory sauce is so easy to make.

Barbecued Chicken on a wooden surface.
Fork sticking out of a barbequed chicken leg on a wooden surface.

Why is barbecued chicken so perennially popular? Because it’s just a perfect food. Tangy, slightly spicy, sticky sauce coating the most well-liked protein around. You can make it in the oven, you can make it on the grill, you can make it in the slow cooker, you can make it on a grill pan.

To me, no matter how I make it or when I make it, it speaks of summer, and that’s probably another reason why we all love it so—it takes us mentally to outdoor get-togethers, evenings where it stays light for hours, and a slower warm weather pace—even if we are eating in in November straight from the oven.

Do you say BBQ or barbecue or BBQue? I am more of a barbecue kind of speller-outer, but I flipflop. I wonder if there is a regionality to this…

Barbecued Chicken on a wooden surface with a serving fork.

Bone-In BBQ Chicken Recipe

This barbecued chicken recipe calls for bone-in, skin on chicken pieces, but of course you can use boneless skinless breasts or thighs, or even pull off the skin from the bone-in chicken before cooking. It’s all good. And other than chicken, anything you like with barbecue sauce on it can also be used.

You’ll see that the chicken starts off without sauce on the grill—that’s because bone-in pieces take a while to cook and the sugar in the sauce will start to caramelize/brown (possibly burn) before the chicken is fully cooked if you baste the chicken with the sauce from the get-go. Just let it start cooking, and then hit it with the sauce.

Making Barbecued Chicken in the Oven

So the recipe below is for the grill, but you can also bake your chicken in the oven. Just set the oven for 375°F and slather up your chicken with the sauce and bake it on a rimmed baking sheet sprayed with nonstick spray or lined with foil or parchment. Bone-in pieces will take about 40 to 50 minutes. You can sauce the chicken before baking it as long as you keep the temp to 375° or 350°F—higher than that and the sauce might brown too quickly.

The Best Barbecued Chicken: For summer entertaining, when in doubt, barbecued chicken is always the answer. Plus, this tangy, savory sauce is so easy to make!

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Making Barbecued Chicken on a Grill Pan

You can also use a grill pan, and if I’m doing that I prefer boneless pieces of chicken. Brush your chicken with the barbecue sauce and cook it for about 6 to 8 minutes on each side for boneless breasts (more if they are very thick), and about 8 to 10 minutes on each side for boneless thighs. Skin on or off, your call—I usually go for no skin, because it won’t get nicely crispy and I think that’s really the point of skin.

Tongs flipping chicken on a grill pan.

What to Serve with Barbecued Chicken:

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5 from 3 votes

Barbecued Chicken

For summer entertaining, when in doubt, barbecued chicken is always the answer. Plus, this tangy, savory sauce is so easy to make.
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes
Servings: 6 People

Equipment

Ingredients 

  • 1 recipe Barbecue Sauce
  • 5 pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken pieces your choice of thighs, breasts and drumsticks

Instructions 

  • Preheat the grill to medium (or preheat the broiler with the rack placed 6 to 8 inches away from the heat). Place the chicken, naked at first, on the grill or under the broiler and cook with the grill covered for about 10 minutes on each side, until the chicken is—to your best estimation—about 2/3 cooked. Watch for smoke and flare-ups.
  • Now baste the chicken with the barbecue sauce and give it another 5 minutes or so on each side, basting as necessary and checking to see that it’s caramelizing nicely, but not burning. When the outside looks the way you like it, and it’s cooked throughout, let it sit for a few minutes off the heat and serve.

Notes

You’ll see that the chicken starts off without sauce on the grill—that’s because bone-in pieces take a while to cook and the sugar in the sauce will start to caramelize/brown (possibly burn) before the chicken is fully cooked if you baste the chicken with the sauce from the get-go. Just let it start cooking, and then hit it with the sauce.

Nutrition

Calories: 390kcal, Carbohydrates: 1g, Protein: 34g, Fat: 27g, Saturated Fat: 8g, Cholesterol: 136mg, Sodium: 129mg, Potassium: 343mg, Sugar: 1g, Vitamin A: 254IU, Vitamin C: 3mg, Calcium: 20mg, Iron: 2mg
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About Katie Workman

Katie Workman is a cook, a writer, a mother of two, an activist in hunger issues, and an enthusiastic advocate for family meals, which is the inspiration behind her two beloved cookbooks, Dinner Solved! and The Mom 100 Cookbook.

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4 Comments

  1. Best bbq sauce! (Despite my bloopy splatters)

    BBQ chicken is a longtime bete noire but this was fabulous! And then fabulous again and again.

  2. Summer on a plate! Once I discovered your bbq sauce, I’ve never gone back to the bottle, another family favorite!