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By Hasan Semay
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About the recipe
This recipe has been in the family since Dad was a kid; it’s had many variations, from squashing in a kiwi to tenderise the meat to marinating it overnight with yoghurt. I think that me and Kamil have finally got it to a point where it’s at its best and, to be honest, that’s happened from just simplifying and stripping it down. It’s super important to get yourself a brilliant chicken for this – don’t get me wrong, of course you can make it with a supermarket chicken, but if you can get your hands on a big, beautiful, organic bird, it’s just gonna be better. Growing up, this marinade always went on little cubes of chicken breast or on bone-in, skin-on thighs. The more I cooked on the BBQ and understood temperature, the more I used spatchcocked chickens. Whole chickens aren’t the easiest to cook, but if you have a go, it pays off hugely. BBQ’ing a chicken low and slow is a gamechanger – it allows you to slowly build flavour and great colour.
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For the chicken
3 tablespoons kirimizi toz biber, or a really good sweet paprika
3 tablespoons pul biber
1 bulb of garlic, finely grated
190ml vegetable oil (7fl oz)
2 lemons, juice of
2.2kg organic, free-range chicken, spatchcocked (5lb)
sea salt
For the dressed herbs
20g coriander (¾ oz)
20g flat-leaf parsley (¾ oz)
15g mint (½ oz)
1 green chilli
2 tablespoons pomegranate molasses
20ml good-quality olive oil (4 teaspoons)
For the yoghurt and cumin tomatoes
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
430g cherry tomatoes (15oz)
1 large clove of garlic
150g strained yoghurt (5½ oz, look for the stuff called suzme in Turkish supermarkets)
20ml good-quality olive oil (4 teaspoons)
sea salt and black pepper
lavash or other flatbread, to serve
OK, so throughout the book you’ll hear me refer to ‘counts’ as this is how I was taught to measure the heat of a BBQ as a kid. My old man taught me a basic rule. He stuck his hand out over the fire about 13cm (5in) from the grills and counted to 5.
If you put your hand over the fire and only get to a count of 1 before pulling your hand away in agony, that’s a good temperature for charring veg. A 2 count will cook fish super-fast and crispy
A 3–4 count is optimum temperature for red meat and thicker-cut steaks; still hot enough to get a good seal without fucking your presentation. When cooking chicken, I always go for a 5 count, and especially if you’re cooking boring chicken breasts.
I was always fascinated by my dad’s hands; weathered and tough, and how he could turn pieces of meat with his bare hands. But I get it now – when you’re a BBQ veteran, you don’t need tongs. Kamil, ‘Bana verdiğiniz ilham, coşku ve destek olmasaydı, bugun olduğum kişi asla olmazdım. Teşekkurler baba.’
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