How do i improve my hot and spicy chicken breast recipes so that the heat isn't an after taste?

How do i improve my hot and spicy chicken breast recipes so that the heat isn't an after taste? - Person Cooking Street Food

This was my recipe from last week:

Chicken Breast Marinade (this is after cutting them up into small pieces):

  1. Yogurt
  2. Sriracha
  3. Lemon Juice
  4. Black Pepper

Marinate for 30 minutes.

Caramelized Onions

  1. Black Pepper
  2. Salt
  3. Turmeric
  4. Soy Sauce (when the pan looks dry, only add a little bit)

Cook 2 minutes on each side on a hot pan or when the sauce dries up which gives the best flavor.

My other recipe for whole grilled chicken breast:

Marinate (30 minutes)

  1. Salt n Black Pepper
  2. Chili Powder
  3. Lemon Juice

Toss on grill for 6 minutes on each side.

above are just a very roughly written recipes

The problem I have with both is that the hotness or spiciness does not kick in when you eat the chicken; it kicks in as an after taste. I want it to be enjoyably hot, not excessively hot: I've refrained from adding in chili peppers--we have a ton of dried peppers that are very spicy at home. I don't know what to do to achieve what I want: hot but kicks but not too hot but also enjoyable.



Best Answer

You need chili. Most of your heat comes from black pepper, which is different from the heat in chili, and isn't as strong or long lasting. Chili heat is immediate, persistent, lasts and builds up as you eat more so that's where you want to go. The thing is to control the heat by modifying the strength and amount of the chili you use. There's so much variation in chilis, from mild to tonsil-destruction, you just need to find a one you like and add the right amount. Some experimentation is in order.

One easy step would be to add some chili powder to your marinade and see how you like it. A more immediate chili may come from fresh chili in a salsa or barbecue sauce that goes on the side. Marinades only penetrate a little way, all the flavor is on the outside, a sauce would give you heat throughout, and fresh chili tends to be a more immediate flavor. There are plenty of mild varieties to try.




Pictures about "How do i improve my hot and spicy chicken breast recipes so that the heat isn't an after taste?"

How do i improve my hot and spicy chicken breast recipes so that the heat isn't an after taste? - From above of closeup of raw chicken legs with seasoning cooking on metal grill grate
How do i improve my hot and spicy chicken breast recipes so that the heat isn't an after taste? - Chili Lot
How do i improve my hot and spicy chicken breast recipes so that the heat isn't an after taste? - Red Chillis on Brown Wooden Tray



How do you absorb the taste of chicken?

Flavor Trick #1: Marinate Whole or Sliced Chicken Breasts for 30 to 90 Minutes Before Cooking
  • Lemon-Garlic: \xbe cup olive oil + \xbc cup lemon juice + 4 cloves crushed garlic + 1 teaspoon paprika + pinch of salt.
  • Balsamic: \xbe cup olive oil + \xbc cup balsamic vinegar + 2 teaspoons fresh oregano + pinch of salt.


  • What can I add to chicken breast for flavor?

    THE BEST CHICKEN SEASONING BLEND
  • salt.
  • fresh ground pepper.
  • paprika \u2013 smoky or sweet, your choice.
  • cayenne pepper.
  • garlic powder.
  • onion powder.
  • dried thyme.
  • dried basil.


  • How do I cook chicken all the way through?

    Mistake: You don't check the temperature.Chicken should be cooked to 165 degrees Fahrenheit; to test it, insert a meat thermometer into the thickest part of the meat (without touching a bone). Try to avoid cooking the meat beyond this temperature, because that's a surefire way to have dry meat on your hands.

    Why does chicken take so long to cook?

    The average cooking time for boneless chicken breasts ranges from 35 minutes to 45 minutes, at 350F (depending on size). Expect to add an additional 5 minutes or more to the cooking time for bone-in pieces as bones absorb heat, increasing the time it takes the chicken to cook all the way through.



    3 Ways To Cook The Juiciest Chicken Breast Ever - Bobby's Kitchen Basics




    More answers regarding how do i improve my hot and spicy chicken breast recipes so that the heat isn't an after taste?

    Answer 2

    This is based on purely observation, over 40 years, it contains no actual scientific basis whatsoever.

    Something I've always noticed is that if I'm eating an Indian curry & it's starting to feel a bit too hot/spicy, then the more of it I eat, the hotter it's going to get.

    If I eat a Thai curry - let's just consider the plainer green or jungle curry for this - then the hottest mouthful is the first. It doesn't build up as you eat, it gets easier.

    I started to examine the essential difference between these two. We can't blind test every single ingredient, so let's ignore the aromatics.
    In fact, to cut a long story short [I'm over-simplifying a lot], you can ignore everything except the chilli type.

    Indian curry's main heat potential is black pepper & red chilli, usually dried or ground.
    Thai curry's main heat potential is fresh green chilli, finger or unripe bird's eyes.

    Red chilli powder builds over time, fresh green is right there at the start, but you slightly get used to it as you keep eating.*

    So, see if you can incorporate fresh green chillis into one of those recipes. Probably the smaller/thinner the better to keep the liquid levels down. You'll probably have to blend or very finely chop it without the seeds & adjust your liquids accordingly.

    *The simplest way to double-check this is by making variations on a pico de gallo theme, no cooking required, but cold chilli powder really takes a long build-up compared to cooked.
    For these purposes, sriracha is going to equate to dried chilli powder.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Artem Beliaikin, Julia Filirovska, Artem Beliaikin, Artem Beliaikin