How To Cook the Perfect Piri Piri Chicken

How To Cook the Perfect Piri Piri Chicken

Celebrity gastronaut Bob Blumer shares this must-try recipe

Piri piri chicken is traditionally made with African bird’s-eye chilis, hence its name, which is derived from the Swahili word piri-piri, or “strong pepper.” With your first bite, you taste the tomato and bell pepper in the sauce, then the heat of the chilis kicks in, followed by the racy acidity of the lemon juice and cider vinegar. Since piri piri chicken has yet to be appropriated by a major fast food chain, its unique taste profile is a welcome diversion from the more popular styles of chicken.

The beauty of piri piri chicken is that once you have made the sauce, it multitasks as the marinade, the tenderizer, the basting sauce and the dipping sauce — creating a full 360° piri piri experience.

1 whole, best-available chicken, or the equivalent in boneless or bone-in pieces
2 cups Piri Piri Piri! Sauce (see recipe here)
1 cup chopped parsley to finish


If using a whole chicken, butterfly it, or cut it into two halves.

Place your chosen cuts of chicken in a large resealable plastic bag and add 1 cup Piri Piri Piri! Sauce.

Squeeze out the air and seal the bag.

Massage chicken through the bag until it is thoroughly covered in sauce.

Refrigerate for a minimum of 2 hours.

For butterflied chicken, chicken halves and all bone-in pieces:

Preheat the grill for indirect medium-high heat and place the chicken bone-side down over the section of the grill with no direct heat.
Close the lid and cook until the internal temperature of the breast is 160°F and the thigh is 165°F, or until the juices in the thigh run clear when poked with a fork — roughly 45 minutes.
Baste with extra sauce in the last 10 minutes.
If any parts of the skin start to get too dark, lightly tent the darkened section with a small piece of aluminum foil.

For boneless pieces:

Preheat the grill for direct medium heat, about 400°F, and place the chicken onto the grate directly over the heat source.

Close the lid. Turn once after about 5 minutes; baste with extra sauce before turning.
Close the lid again and continue cooking for 5 more minutes, or until the internal temperature of
the breast is 160°F and the thigh is 165°F, or until the juices in the thigh run clear when poked with
a fork.

To serve:

Serve with remaining Piri Piri Piri! Sauce for dipping and sprinkle.

This recipe is from Bob’s latest cookbook, Flavorbomb: A Rogue Guide to Making Everything Taste Betterfrom Flavorbomb by Bob Blumer. Copyright © 2020 Bob Blumer. Photography by Suzi Q. Varin.
Published by Appetite by Random House®, a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited.
Reproduced by arrangement with the Publisher. All rights reserved

Bob Blumer

Bob Blumer is a Food Network O.G. He created and hosted three pioneering series that ran for 12 consecutive years and aired in over 20 countries. He has also written seven acclaimed cookbooks, broken eight food-related Guinness World Records, and is a long-term ambassador for Second Harvest. His most recent cookbook Flavorbomb: A Rogue Guide to Making Everything Taste Better is a collection of the tricks, tips, hacks and techniques he gleaned as he ate his way around the globe for the past 25 years.
The Toronto Sun says “Blumer once again pushes boundaries, but in a way that encourages readers to let go their own culinary hesitations to create simple meals built on layers of flavor.”
Bob’s Instagram feed exudes creativity and reveals his passion for cooking, foraging and taking the road less traveled. Follow him: @bobblumer.
To work with Bob, contact him at: gastronaut@bobblumer.com
Website: http://bobblumer.com/

Posted on Friday, February 23rd, 2024
Filed under Food | Recipes

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