My problem was I could never remember all the steps in trussing the bird correctly, so a wing or a leg would come loose and flop around on the bottom of the grill. Not a problem with spatchcocking!I, too used to Q up a rotisserie chicken on my Weber. Came out great, Once, my bird mount set screws got loose and the bird stopped spinning. A true pain to fix.
Yes. The crew has you pointed in the right direction. It should lay flat as if it were two halves just still attached at the breast. Yours sure looks still in the round.Educate me on a spatchcock chicken? A google search shows how to remove the back bone, turn it over and crack the breast. This is what I did. The back bone is only about 3/4" wide.
I missed that the entire backbone was not removed. When the bird lies flat on the grill, cook time is substantially reduced, at least that's been my experience. I can cook a medium-sized spatchcocked chicken in 45 minutes to an hour. Using the rotisserie approach, the same bird would take twice as long to cook.Yes. The crew has you pointed in the right direction. It should lay flat as if it were two halves just still attached at the breast. Yours sure looks still in the round.
At the end of the day it still looks like a tasty bird!
I believe the cook time was extended because the grill is so small, that I had to use indirect heat. I had a meat thermometer in the thigh and cooked to temperature. Can't remove early. When I used an old Weber, with direct heat, cook time was about 45 minutes. The bird weighed in at 4.5 pounds.I missed that the entire backbone was not removed. When the bird lies flat on the grill, cook time is substantially reduced, at least that's been my experience. I can cook a medium-sized spatchcocked chicken in 45 minutes to an hour. Using the rotisserie approach, the same bird would take twice as long to cook.