PyroDust
Cornell-Style Charcoal Chicken Quarters with PyroDust CoopDust

Cornell-Style Charcoal Chicken Quarters with PyroDust CoopDust

Mar 6, 2026 • Cook, Recipes

Cornell-style chicken isn’t about thick, sweet BBQ sauce. It’s vinegar-forward, savory, and built for charcoal. The secret is a simple basting sauce you brush on early and often, then heavier near the end of the cook 

For this cook, I used that Cornell method but seasoned the chicken generously with PyroDust BBQ Dry Rub CoopDust first. The result is crispy skin, juicy meat, and a bite that’s pure backyard BBQ.


What makes this method different

Cornell chicken is the opposite of “sauce at the end.”

That basting plus charcoal heat is what creates the flavor.


Ingredients

Chicken

Cornell-style basting sauce

Cornell Cooperative Extension version (you can scale as needed)

Mixing method matters: beat the egg, add oil and beat again, then add the rest and stir 

Leftovers can be stored in a glass jar in the fridge


Prep

  1. Pat the chicken dry.

  2. Season all sides heavily with CoopDust. Don’t be shy, chicken can take it.

  3. Let it sit while the charcoal comes up.


Grill setup

Wait until the coals are ready and the heavy flames calm down. Cornell’s method specifically has you put the chicken over the fire after the flame is gone  so you’re cooking on heat, not flare-ups.


The cook

This is exactly the sequence I used.

Step 1… Direct heat to set color and skin

Start the chicken over direct heat to set the color and start tightening the skin.

Step 2… Indirect to cook through

Once you’ve got the color you want, move to indirect heat and let it cook through.

Step 3… Medium/direct to crisp the skin

When you’re close to done, bring it back to medium/direct to finish the skin.

Total cook time is typically around an hour depending on heat and chicken size


Doneness

Cornell’s classic doneness check is pulling the wing away from the body. If it splits easily and there’s no red color in the joint, it’s done 

For accuracy, I also use temps:


What to expect


Tips that make it easier

Quick summary

Season heavy with CoopDust.


Direct heat for color…

indirect to finish…

medium/direct to crisp the skin.


Baste every turn, light early and heavier near the end

 

Source and credit

The Cornell-style basting sauce and the “baste early and often” charcoal chicken method trace back to Cornell Cooperative Extension Information Bulletin 862, written by Dr. Robert C. Baker.

If you want the original reference material, here are the two source documents:

Full credit to Dr. Baker and Cornell Cooperative Extension for the original sauce and method, I’m simply documenting my cook and how I apply it with PyroDust BBQ Dry Rub CoopDust.

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