Budget Bytes

03 March 2013

slow cooker jerk chicken

$8.74 recipe / $2.19 serving
The slow cooker wins again! This incredibly easy recipe boasts big flavor and very, very little work. Just mix up a fragrant spice rub in your blender, slather it over the chicken, and then let the slow cooker do the rest. You will want to pop the chicken in the oven under the broiler for a few minutes at the end to get that nice, charred, crispy skin that is just not achievable in a slow cooker, but still... SO little effort!

Cooking the chicken in the slow cooker makes it juicy and fall-off-the-bone tender. I don't advocate cooking this on low because even on high it takes a while for the chicken to reach safe temperatures. So, plan this dish for a day when you'll be home and can get back to it after four hours.

This did make a LOT of chicken, but the recipe can easily be halved to fit smaller slow cooker or to feed a smaller crowd. My slow cooker is somewhere around 6 quarts and so a whole cut up chicken fit nicely. If you have a smaller slow cooker, you can buy a 2 pound pack of chicken thighs, drumsticks, or even a couple of breasts and just halve the spice rub. It's that simple.

Jerk chicken is famous for it's spicy heat, but you can eliminate the serrano pepper and still have some freaking delicious chicken. To make it extra spicy, add the serrano to the spices in the blender. For medium spicy, add the serrano sliced up to the slow cooker like I did. And for mild, just skip it all together!

Slow Cooker Jerk Chicken

Slow Cooker Jerk Chicken

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Total Recipe cost: $8.74
Servings Per Recipe: 4-6
Cost per serving: $2.19
Prep time: 15 min. Cook time: 4 hrs. 10 min. Total: 4.5 hrs.

INGREDIENTS COST
5 lbs. chicken pieces $6.18
1/4 cup molasses (not black strap) $0.55
2 Tbsp vegetable oil $0.08
1/3 cup soy sauce $0.11
4 cloves garlic, peeled $0.32
3-4 inches fresh ginger $0.28
1 Tbsp cinnamon $0.15
1 tsp allspice $0.05
1 tsp thyme $0.05
1/4 tsp nutmeg $0.03
1 medium onion $0.36
1 medium orange $0.49
1 medium serrano or jalapeno pepper $0.09
TOTAL $8.74

STEP 1: To a blender add the molasses, vegetable oil, soy sauce, peeled garlic, ginger (cut into chunks, peeled), cinnamon, allspice, thyme, and nutmeg. Blend until smooth. If you want extra hot jerk chicken, add the serrano to the blender, too.

STEP 2: Arrange the chicken pieces in the slow cooker so that they are nestled tightly and as close to the bottom as possible. Pour about 2/3 of the spice rub over the chicken and use your hands to spread it all over the chicken pieces. Save the rest of the spice rub for later use.

STEP 3: Cut the onion into wedges and slice the orange and serrano. Add the onion, orange, and serrano to the slow cooker. Nestle the pieces down in and under the chicken so that they make close contact. Place the lid on the slow cooker, turn it on to high, and let it cook undisturbed for four hours.

STEP 4: After four hours, carefully remove the chicken and place it on a broiler pan or a baking sheet covered with foil. Tongs work best for this as the chicken will be very hot and very delicate. Spread the rest of the spice rub carefully over the surface of the chicken. Adjust the rack in your oven so that the top of the chicken is 4-5 inches below the broiler. Broil on high for about 5 minutes or until the skin is crispy and browned. Watch the chicken closely as all broilers are different. Broilers can quickly burn food because of their high heat and close proximity of the heat source.

Slow Cooker Jerk Chicken

Step By Step Photos


jerk spice rub
First I mixed up the spice rub. I literally just put everything in the blender and pressed go. Everything as in: molasses, vegetable oil, soy sauce, garlic, ginger, cinnamon, allspice, thyme, and nutmeg.

cut chicken
I bought one whole chicken cut into pieces. So, that's two breast halves, two drumsticks, two thighs, and two wings. If you don't like the various pieces, you can just buy breasts, or thighs, or whatever you like. This recipe is written for about five pounds of chicken, but you could easily halve it to cook just two pounds.

arrange chicken
Arrange the chicken pieces in the slow cooker so that they are tightly nestled together and as close to the bottom as possible. This will help them heat and cook evenly.

spice rub on chicken
Pour about 2/3 of the spice rub over the chicken and spread it around to all surfaces of the chicken pieces. Save the rest of the spice rub for later.

orange onion serrano
Slice up the onion, orange, and serrano.

orange onion pepper in cooker
Add the onion, orange, and serrano to the slow cooker and nestle the slices down into the chicken pieces. The more contact the more flavor.

cooked jerk chicken
Put the lid on the slow cooker and cook on high for four hours. I don't suggest cooking on low because it just takes too long for the chicken to reach a safe temperature. After four hours the chicken is super tender and juicy.

more seasoning
Carefully remove the chicken pieces from the slow cooker and place them on a broiler pan or a baking sheet covered with foil. Spread the rest of the spice rub over top.

broiled jerk chicken
Arrange the rack in your oven so that the top of the chicken will be about 4-5 inches from the broiler. Broil on high for about 5 minutes or until the skin is crispy and it has browned really well. Every broiler is different, so you have to watch it VERY closely.

Slow Cooker Jerk Chicken
And then you're ready to eat! And good thing because that smell has likely been tantalizing you ALL DAY.

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21 Comments:

  • At March 3, 2013 at 5:10 PM , Blogger Ashlee N. said...

    How would this work with boneless/skinless chicken breast tenderloin? I'm feeding a group, and that's what I already have, and would be easy to split up servings.

    What would be a good pairing? I was thinking coconut jasmine rice, to balance the heat. Thoughts?

     
  • At March 3, 2013 at 5:11 PM , Anonymous Tony said...

    Looks awesome...just a note though that it looks like you are using a serrano and not a habanero pepper. I only bring this up because serranos are 10,000-25,000 on the Scoville Heat scale while a habanero is 10 times that, 100,000-350,000. Using an actual habanero would bring a much more intense heat to the dish.

     
  • At March 3, 2013 at 5:23 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Ashlee - You could use boneless/skinless, although it will most likely fall apart after cooking in the slow cooker. I paired mine with a coconut rice concoction (I'll post it in a few days), but a regular coconut rice would be great, too.

    Tony - Ah, good point. They were labeled habaneros at the store, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was wrong! I think traditional jerk chicken uses scotch bonnet, which is even hotter I think?

     
  • At March 3, 2013 at 5:29 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Tony - Yep, just googled pictures and that's DEFINITELY a serrano :P Thanks for the heads up!!

     
  • At March 3, 2013 at 5:29 PM , Blogger Ashlee N. said...

    Do you know of a better way I could cook the tenderloins? I love the mix of spices you use! I love the ease of the crock-pot, but I could make it in a skillet instead, if you think that would work.

     
  • At March 3, 2013 at 5:31 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Ashlee- Yeah, you could definitely just use those spices on a tenderloin and cook it in the oven as you normally would. I would suggest adding a bit of lime juice or vinegar to add a little zing, though.

     
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  • At March 3, 2013 at 7:56 PM , Blogger Unknown said...

    This has some of my favorite ingredients: molasses and orange. I like the broiling at the end. My hubby usually doesn't like things cooked in a slow cooker, but that last step (along with the spiciness of this) could finally win him over!

     
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  • At March 4, 2013 at 2:26 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    So, 4 hours only?

    I was thinking -at first - that I could drop this in the crock pot before work. But if 4 hours is max, it would be jerk chicken stew by the time I get home.

    Do you have any alternatives for those of us who need to give it at least 8 hours?

    Thanks, Beth! You're the best!

     
  • At March 4, 2013 at 2:33 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Anon - I really can't think of another way to do it (without actually testing it) that I think would work. Eight hours on high and it would disintegrate (mine was already super delicate at 4 hours) and 8 hours on low would just be dangerous with raw meat (it took 2 hours even on high for it to come up to a simmer).

     
  • At March 4, 2013 at 2:42 PM , Blogger Gina said...

    Ooooh I've been looking for a good jerk chicken recipe! If I didn't have a double batch of your oven fajitas cooking right now, I'd be making this tonight. I thought about two things I wanted to share: a great second use for this chicken (I'm usually cooking for one) would be to pull it and throw it on some greens with honey mustard dressing. You could even make wraps and take them for lunch! Also, I like spice so I would probably blend the serrano, but without the seeds at first so I could adjust the heat without going too spicy. I can't wait to make this recipe!!!

     
  • At March 4, 2013 at 9:20 PM , Blogger Unknown said...

    Beth - I'm wondering what the approximate measure of jerk seasoning is used. I've got some pre-made seasoning and would like to use that.
    Thanks, Love the site!

     
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  • At March 5, 2013 at 10:31 PM , Anonymous Another Beth said...

    OK, Beth, now you know you've made it big- the Spammers are hitting your comments full force. :)

    This is cooking away in my crock pot now. My store didn't have serranos OR habaneros (sacrilege here in CA)so I had to settle for jalapenos. I just put twice as much, we'll see what happens. Fortunately I'm a big fan of spicy, so I'm sure it'll be fine.

     
  • At March 6, 2013 at 6:05 AM , Blogger Beth M said...

    OMG, Beth, you don't even KNOW how bad the spam is! A few may slip through, but I delete a couple hundred per day!! Luckily the spam filter catches about 75% of them. ...but still.

    I hope your jerk chicken turns out good!

     
  • At March 6, 2013 at 8:24 PM , Blogger purrlgurrl said...

    Thanks for posting a jerk chicken recipe where the "heat" level can be optional. We used to be able to get jerk chicken from a local Caribbean hole-in-the-wall and it was always served mild -- with plenty of hot peppers and hot sauces available for eaters to add at will. I fell in love with that basic jerk flavor (sans heat). It's complexities are, I think, completely lost in a capsicum blaze.

     
  • At March 7, 2013 at 9:30 PM , Blogger Unknown said...

    My husband named our Crock Pot "The Food Destroyer," but he raved about this recipe! Thanks for another great meal, Beth!

     
  • At March 13, 2013 at 8:28 AM , Blogger Alyson's Day Dream said...

    Beth-

    So excited about this recipie it is like you were reading my mind when you made this. Ready for dinner tonight :)

     
  • At March 14, 2013 at 8:34 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    We made this the other day in the pressure cooker instead of a slow cooker and it turned out delicious (quickly, too)!

    -Kevin

     

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