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Ingredients
Note: This jerk marinade recipe was doubled for future meals. Do not pour entire jerk sauce over the chicken.
- 6 Leg quarters or thighs with skin on
- 1 bunch of scallions (6-8 scallions)
- 3 tablespoons of fresh thyme
- 5 cloves of garlic
- 1-1.5 cups of soy sauce
- 5 Habanero peppers, deveined and deseeded
- 1 teaspoon of ground nutmeg
- 2-3 teaspoons of cloves
- 1-2 tablespoons of ground all-spice
- 2-3 tablespoons olive oil
- 3 plantains
- Separate skin from leg meat. This will help the fat to render and coat the plantains underneath. It will also help the skin to crisp.
- Blend scallions, thyme, garlic, soy sauce, Habanero peppers, nutmeg, cloves, all-spice, and olive oil in a food processor. Make adjustments to ingredient amounts for taste.
- Pour 1 cup of the jerk marinade over the chicken meat in a bowl and coat all over. Let soak in refrigerator for 2 hours minimum, turning the meat over every so often.
- Heat oven to 350 degrees F.
- Cut plantains into 3/4" diagonal slices. Layer the bottom of a lasagna pan with the slices. If the plantain peels are not completely black or ripened before using, sprinkle 2 tablespoons of granulated sugar over the top of the plantains to encourage carmelization. Layer marinated chicken leg quarters over the plantain slices, skin side up.
- When oven has heated up to the right temperature, place lasagna pan into the oven and bake for 1 hour and 40 minutes or until the leg meat is cooked to 165 deg F or leaks clear juices when pierced. Remove the chicken from pan and let rest for at least 5 minutes.
- Pour excess chicken fat out of lasagna pan. I like to save the rendered chicken fat for other recipes. Change oven setting to broil. Place plantain layer underneath broiler and broil for an additional 15 minutes or until caramelized.
- Once chicken leg quarters have rested, cut drumstick away from thigh meat with a chef's knife and plate. Spoon fresh jerk sauce over the top.
Mina's customization: I like my jerk marinade on the strong side, so I added a couple more Habanero peppers and a lot more all-spice and cloves than normally recommended. I also added way more scallion and garlic than normally recommended. The end result is that it actually tastes a lot like the jerk chicken served at my favorite Jamaican restaurant in San Jose, Back-A-Yard. Back-A-Yard is still the bench mark for jerk chicken, unfortunately, despite all of the jerk chicken we sampled in the Cayman Islands.
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