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1. Set up the grill (the “Kettle Jerk Zone”)
You want two zones:
Indirect Zone (main cooking area)
- Bank a full chimney of charcoal on one side of the kettle.
- Add 2–3 chunks of pimento wood if you have it; otherwise pecan, apple, or hickory.
- Place a drip pan under the cool side to catch jerk marinade drippings.
Direct Zone (finishing area)
- The charcoal side will be your hot zone for crisping the skin at the end.
Target temp
- Keep the kettle at 350–375°F for most of the cook.
- Use the top vent directly over the chicken to pull smoke across the meat.
2. Prep the chicken
Use bone‑in, skin‑on thighs, legs, or quarters.
- Score the meat lightly.
- Coat with your jerk marinade (the one I gave you earlier works perfectly).
- Marinate 8–24 hours.
3. Cook the chicken
Place chicken on the cool side, skin up.
Timing
- Cook 45–60 minutes indirect.
- Rotate pieces halfway through for even smoke.
Internal temp
- Jerk is traditionally cooked well‑done for texture and flavor: 175–185°F for thighs/legs.
Smoke management
- Add a small chunk of wood every 20–30 minutes if you want a deeper jerk profile.
- Keep top vent ¾ open and bottom vent ½ open to maintain heat.
4. Finish over direct heat
Move chicken to the hot side for 2–4 minutes per side.
This does three things:
- crisps the skin
- caramelizes the brown sugar in the marinade
- gives you that authentic jerk char
If you want a Memphis‑style glaze, brush it on now.
5. Rest & serve
Rest 5–10 minutes. Serve with:
- rice & peas
- lime wedges
- cabbage slaw
- grilled pineapple
- or your favorite Southern sides
Why the Weber kettle works so well
- The dome shape pulls smoke across the chicken like a Jamaican barrel smoker.
- The two‑zone setup gives you perfect control.
- The kettle’s airflow lets you tune heat with precision.
- The finishing zone gives you that jerk char without burning the marinade.
