Cherry honey ale glaze
Cold, Hard Football Facts for Jul 31, 2005
This is another beer-based recipe that comes to us thanks to the generosity of Lucy Saunders, America's foremost authority on cooking with beer. She's written numerous books and runs the Web site www.beercook.com.
She makes this recipe as both a marinade and a glaze for chicken or pork.
- 1 cup chopped cherries
- 3 tablespoons honey
- 1/4 cup minced scallion
- 1 tablespoon minced fresh cilantro
- 2 cloves garlic, finely minced
- 1 to 2 pinches cayenne pepper or more to taste
- Dash white Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tablespoon lime juice
- 12 ounces honey ale
- 2 Tablespoons cherry spread (whole fruit spread, not an artificial spread)
Mix all ingredients expect cherry spread in a blender. When blended, set aside 1/2 cup. Place 2 pounds of chicken or pork with the remaining marinade in a large resealable plastic bag. Seal and chill for at least 2 hours. Mix the half-cup of reserved marinade with the 2 Tablespoons of cherry spread. Remove chicken or pork from marinade and cook on grill over indirect low heat (keep away from open flame or honey will burn). Season with extra pepper or salt if desired. Spoon reserved cherry-honey ale mixture over cooked food just before serving.
Read more: Cold Hard Football Facts, NFL
Forearm Shiver: the CHFF Blog
- Hockey Announcer Gone Wild: You Want To Party (Maybe) With This Guy
- Best Pass Defense Ever: Ronde Barber And The 2002 Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Reese Witherspoon Arrest Video: Hot, Bothered And Handcuffed
- Sam Adams In A Can, Just In Time For Summer Drinking Season
- Live From Radio City: Reporter Punks NFL Draft Fans
Quick Outs
- The 5.0 Club: Best Rushing Teams in NFL History
- Sieves: The Worst Run Defenses In NFL History
- Monsters of the Midway: We Need The Chicago Bears More Than Ever
- Boston, Sports, Patriotism And Terror
- The 100 Stingiest Defenses In Football History
- NFL Crown Rule: Will It Dethrone Rushing King Adrian Peterson?
- Year Of The Offensive Tackle: Not Always The 'Safe' Draft Bet
- Draft Habits: NFL Teams Covet LBs, Duped By False Temptress WRs
- Big Tease: 2012 New England Patriots And NFL's History Of Offensive Failures
- Epic Fail: The Wide Receiver Draft Class Of 2012
Must See Videos









