Why I don't cook chicken to 165°F

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2022
  • You might wonder what temperature you should pull your chicken breasts at to make sure they are safe or maybe you are tired of dry chicken and are looking to improve your skills! Pulling your meat at the right temperature is the easiest way to make sure you have juicy meat that is also safe to eat.
    The USDA suggests cooking chicken breasts to 165°F. Is that too high, too low, or just right?
    Best Thermometer:
    www.thermoworks.com/thermapen...
    Temperature and Time Chicken Study:
    doi.org/10.1016/S0168-1605(01...
    Equipment I use to make the videos:
    www.amazon.com/shop/grilltope...
    As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
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Комментарии • 49

  • @flakbait5771
    @flakbait5771 Год назад +13

    Ayyyy practical illustrations with models! This show continues to move towards its endpoint as the Good Eats of RUclips Grilling. 8 D

    • @GrillTopExperience
      @GrillTopExperience  Год назад +1

      I love Alton Brown. I'd be happy just sitting in his shadow!

  • @HobiesGarageBBQ
    @HobiesGarageBBQ Год назад +2

    Excellent points and great production - as usual. 🙂

  • @BigLewBBQ
    @BigLewBBQ Год назад +1

    That string pulled car demonstration was an excellent analogy. You are a genius. Chicken looked quite good too.

  • @nikhilshetye24
    @nikhilshetye24 2 месяца назад +1

    Pulling out the meat earlier is important

  • @tylergoldingmagic
    @tylergoldingmagic Год назад

    Great video Ryan! Love the title and thumbnail as well

  • @leeh9420
    @leeh9420 Год назад +4

    Thermometers and probes utterly changed my grilling, and made it so. much. better. Thanks for the vid - I honestly never thought much about the carry-over with chicken, and have sometimes thought my results could be better. Thanks again!

    • @GrillTopExperience
      @GrillTopExperience  Год назад

      You bet. Learn, experiment, and improve. Thanks for the support.

  • @ARSENICKMUSIC
    @ARSENICKMUSIC Год назад +1

    Love the channel brother. Informative and based in logic. Super digestible and easy to listen to. We appreciate that !

    • @GrillTopExperience
      @GrillTopExperience  Год назад

      Thanks! I'm just having a good time hoping more people get out and grill.

  • @WeberEnthusiast
    @WeberEnthusiast Месяц назад

    Awesome upload buddy

  • @davidsellon4580
    @davidsellon4580 Год назад +2

    I really appreciate your science-based approach to grilling.

    • @GrillTopExperience
      @GrillTopExperience  Год назад +1

      Thank you! I've been trying to find the why behind what people do when they grill. Some stuff works and others don't!

    • @ARSENICKMUSIC
      @ARSENICKMUSIC Год назад +1

      Same here man. Same here. Thanks to people you and others I'm actually learning a lot about cooking and remembering it due to learning the facts and science behind why things are the way they are not just needing to know that you need to do something a certain way for the art of the practice haha

  • @ash4go
    @ash4go Год назад

    Amen! Spot on, thanks!

  • @elmin2323
    @elmin2323 Год назад

    Well explained legend

  • @PAPATexas
    @PAPATexas Год назад

    Good info.

  • @randypoe560
    @randypoe560 Год назад

    great tip thank you

  • @JohnJohnDu4
    @JohnJohnDu4 Год назад

    Excellent videi

    • @GrillTopExperience
      @GrillTopExperience  Год назад

      Thanks for checking it out John. I hope it helps you get juicy chicken breasts!

  • @thomabb
    @thomabb 10 месяцев назад

    I pull my boneless chicken breasts at 150 degrees and rest them for 10-15 minutes. Carryover takes them to 155 in 5 minutes. That is more than long enough to kill any dangerous bacteria.
    Bone in chicken breasts go to 155 degrees, or sous-vide to 145 degrees then quickly seared. The heat takes a little longer to get into the marrow. Sous-vide is an excellent way to start chicken.

  • @brettmonge8495
    @brettmonge8495 Год назад +5

    Your day job HAS to be as a teacher of some sort. You do such a great job of explaining things to make them simple.

  • @AwestaKhalid
    @AwestaKhalid 8 месяцев назад

    In regards to pulling it out at 155, you wouldn’t recommend covering it or putting it in airtight Tupperware while you let it rest for 1 min? I just curious if covering it or sealing it will help it maintain that 155 or make it get hotter

    • @GrillTopExperience
      @GrillTopExperience  8 месяцев назад

      If it'll be longer than a few minutes before they are eaten, I'll wrap the plate in aluminum foil, but a Tupperware container would work too.

  • @mikorahming
    @mikorahming 8 месяцев назад

    It's actually 165°F instantaneous or 145°F for 8.5 minutes. Do the 8.5 minutes if you don't want dry white meat.

  • @reformedsoteriology
    @reformedsoteriology Год назад

    cook it slow on a smoker. Once you confirm that every point in the breast has reached 140 degrees, set a timer for 25 min and pull it at that time or if it reaches 154 what ever comes first. Keep in mind that if you plan on resting the bird in a cooler that you may be able to pull it off sooner

  • @mrallan8063
    @mrallan8063 Год назад +3

    Just brine your chicken breast. It will make your food taste better, and keep it juicy... with the bonus of more forgiving if you overcook for too long.

  • @roddy3965
    @roddy3965 Месяц назад

    how long do you let your chicken rest for if you pull out at 157 internal temp?

    • @GrillTopExperience
      @GrillTopExperience  Месяц назад

      It takes 30 seconds at 157 F to kill the germs. I let it rest until the rest of the food is done.

  • @Blockhead140
    @Blockhead140 Год назад

    Juicy chicken breast 🤤.

  • @TheKolbydc8
    @TheKolbydc8 Год назад +2

    I would rather eat chicken so dry it hurts to chew than an overly juicy one.

    • @ChrisF_1982
      @ChrisF_1982 7 месяцев назад +1

      I will never understand this line of thought.

  • @daven8905
    @daven8905 Год назад +3

    Honestly I usually don’t like barely-safe-to-eat sopping-moist chicken. For grilled chicken we really enjoy 180-190 with a really good char on top. You can still get plenty of moisture inside the chicken if you do it right. (And this is coming from a guy who likes rare steaks)

    • @cooljool1
      @cooljool1 Год назад

      is that moisture achieved by brining

    • @daven8905
      @daven8905 Год назад

      @@cooljool1 nah bruh

    • @cooljool1
      @cooljool1 Год назад

      @@daven8905 so how do you keep the moisture going?

    • @daven8905
      @daven8905 Год назад

      @@cooljool1 I don’t need my chicken oozing juices. I just cook it bruh. Marinade it. It’s good

    • @cooljool1
      @cooljool1 Год назад

      @@daven8905 I was asking how you got it juicy at 180-190. Was it the marinade?

  • @jontnoneya3404
    @jontnoneya3404 10 месяцев назад

    Honestly the idea of bacteria inside a chunk of muscle meat, like a chicken breast, where the outside has none is a pretty ridiculous claim. Bacteria on the outside of the meat will foul the smell quickly and everyone knows not to eat smelly meats.
    For example - take beef. Beef can get fouled during the butchering process where bacteria contaminates the meat exposed to the air. This is why you want to cook ground beef thoroughly. However steaks are fine at much lower temps because the outside is where the bacteria is.....same thing with chickens but for some reason, logic doesn't apply to chicken meat.

    • @blackbeltjones2903
      @blackbeltjones2903 8 месяцев назад

      You have no idea what you're talking about. Chicken is notorious for hosting salmonella bacteria.

  • @twisterdude100
    @twisterdude100 10 месяцев назад

    sounds great....but 3 days of vomiting and violent shits from salmonella will make you cook your chicken well done from then on!