Authentic jerk chicken
- Published: 2 Jul 25
- Updated: 2 Jul 25
Fire up the coals and let chef Dom Taylor show you how to make authentic jerk chicken. Jamaican jerk isn’t just a hot-spicy method of flavouring meat for the barbecue – it’s a way of life. Want to cook it in the oven? See FAQs.
- The secret to proper jerk: “The marinade you use for jerk is only half the story; the slow cooking over coals and the unique smoke from pimento wood is just as important to the final flavour,” says Dom. “Pimento wood can be hard to find in the UK (see FAQs), but throwing some soaked thyme sprigs, bay leaves and cinnamon sticks directly onto the coals helps replicate the flavour.”
- Cooking tips: “To get the best out of jerk chicken, you want to cook it slowly, turning and basting it regularly with the jerk sauce. It will take 30-45 minutes for bone-in chicken, so you don’t want your barbecue so hot it’ll burn the outside to a crisp before the centre is cooked through.”
- Colour is good:“Don’t worry too much about the chicken charring and turning black – this is just the marinade absorbing the fragrant smoke and the sugars caramelising. It’s all flavour and that charred smokiness is the perfect accompaniment to the fragrant flavours of the marinade.”
Take a look at more authentic Caribbean recipes, including curry goat, proper Jamaican ginger cake and Andi Oliver’s shrimp curry.
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Serves 4 -
Prep time 20 min, plus overnight marinating. Cook time 1 hour
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Before you start
You need to start the recipe a day ahead. The marinade and sauce can both be made up to 24 hours in advance and kept in the fridge.
Recipe from July 2025 Issue
Nutrition
Nutrition: per serving
- Calories
- 399kcals
- Fat
- 24g (5.1g saturated)
- Protein
- 26g
- Carbohydrates
- 19g (18g sugars)
- Fibre
- 1.3g
- Salt
- 1.2g
delicious. tips
The marinade and sauce can both be made up to 24 hours in advance and kept in the fridge.
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