Hey mics, I apologize for that, it was a reference to another thread and was out of place here, I deleted the post, you might want to do the same.
Huli Huli chicken
I watched the video and now I understand what your talkin' bout, times have sure changed from when I was in Honolulu.
Here are two recipes I found for Huli Huli chicken that are similar:
1.
4-5 lbs chicken quaters
1/3 cup ketchup
1/3 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup brown sugar
3 Tbsp sherry
1 piece ginger root crushed
1 clove of garlic crushed
2.
4-5 lbs chicken quaters
1/4 cup ketchup
1/4 cup shoyu (Japanese soy sauce)
1/2 cup chicken broth
1/3 cup white wine
1/4 cup frozen pineapple juice concentrate
pinch or two of dried ginger
a drop or two of Worcestershire sauce
There are some ingredients in both recipes that I can't buy, so I made my own recipe from the two:
1/4 cup ketchup
1/3 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup chicken broth
1/2 cup pineapple juice
1 piece of ginger root crushed
1 clove of garlic crushed
couple of drops of Worcestershire sauce
I double the amounts, put all of the ingredients in a pot and heat until the sugar is dissolved, cool and then use half of the marinade to marinate the chicken for 2-4 hours in the fridge.
I cook the chicken on my grill with two burners lit just over medium flame, I boil the marinade the chicken was in, add the second batch and place the pot on the grill over the fire that would start the third burner if I turned it on, this keeps the Huli Huli hot. I dip the chicken in the hot marinade 3-4 times as it is cooking, this builds up a nice glaze and if a piece catches on fire I just dunk it in the pot.
What I learned is it's the brown sugar made from Hawaii's cane, the soy sauce and ginger that gives this recipe it's unique flavor, I don't know how close this tastes to what you are accustomed too, but it's a winner here, if you try it you could always tweak it to your own personal tastes.
Gene