MEXICOWANDERER
Aug 23, 2018Explorer
Pollo Al Carbon Estilo Sinaloense
Chicken to the charcoal Sinaloa Style.
Much like passing a coffee mill the aroma of charcoal chicken is a tangible highway distraction.
But did you know that most of the charcoal chicken is broiled over oak and some over mesquite.
But deeper down into the country Mexico City southward, yet another type of barbecue chicken is for sale but you may have to search it out.
Pollo A La Leña (Lay-NYA) is cooked over glowing wood coals. A person might think, so what...charcoal, wood...what's the difference?
To put it bluntly, charcoal chicken has white meat while wood fired chicken has red meat. And the taste is different. A bit more on the wild side without getting weird. Sort of like the difference between a cornish game hen and a pheasant.
The wood imparts a personality. Oak is routine and excellent. Mesquite is smokier and many people prefer it. Guisaxge or Guisache is a hardwood that imparts a taste similar to oak and apple. Sweet. There are chicken places in Chiapas that use tropical hardwood that gives the chicken a sweet flavor like orange or almond (nuts).
Much like passing a coffee mill the aroma of charcoal chicken is a tangible highway distraction.
But did you know that most of the charcoal chicken is broiled over oak and some over mesquite.
But deeper down into the country Mexico City southward, yet another type of barbecue chicken is for sale but you may have to search it out.
Pollo A La Leña (Lay-NYA) is cooked over glowing wood coals. A person might think, so what...charcoal, wood...what's the difference?
To put it bluntly, charcoal chicken has white meat while wood fired chicken has red meat. And the taste is different. A bit more on the wild side without getting weird. Sort of like the difference between a cornish game hen and a pheasant.
The wood imparts a personality. Oak is routine and excellent. Mesquite is smokier and many people prefer it. Guisaxge or Guisache is a hardwood that imparts a taste similar to oak and apple. Sweet. There are chicken places in Chiapas that use tropical hardwood that gives the chicken a sweet flavor like orange or almond (nuts).