Free Shipping On All Orders | Ends 1/2

  • Home
  • General
  • Guides
  • Reviews
  • News
  • Whiskies
  • Cocktails
  • About us
    • Our Story
    • Pendleton Posse
    • Whisky Hands
    • Our Partners
    • News & Stories
    • Whisky FAQ
  • SHOP
  • Military Edition
Buy a Bottle

Introducing

Ernies Chicken Recipe Mi Cocina

Paying homage to the hard work and character woven into the Western lifestyle – a bourbon for those that are seeking a liquid that matches their tenacious spirit and work ethic.

GET YOUR BOTTLE

While the chicken finished, Ernie turned to the accompaniments with the same reverence. He diced ripe tomatoes and folded them into cilantro, minced onion, and a squeeze of lime for a quick pico that tasted like summer in a bowl. He charred corn lightly on the griddle until kernels popped with a smoky snap. If there was stale bread in the cupboard, he’d crisp it into croutons with garlic and olive oil—little islands of texture.

When friends asked for the recipe, Ernie would laugh and give them measurements and method like a teacher giving students a map—enough to find the place, but not a rigid path. “Make it yours,” he’d say. “Leave out the achiote if you can’t find it. Add a roasted pepper if you like. Most of all, don’t rush the marination.” He believed recipes were living things; they thrived on adaptation.

When Ernie first stepped into his tiny Miami kitchen, he felt like an apprentice in a warm, fragrant chapel. The apartment was small, but the windows pulled in sunlight that turned the tiles to gold and made the cilantro on the sill glow. Cooking, for Ernie, was less about recipes and more about memory—about the way a single scent could summon a person, a street, a time.

Eating Ernie’s Chicken was not a performance but a conversation. Each bite offered contrasts: citrus and smoke, crisp skin and tender meat, the herbaceous lift of cilantro against the grounding sweetness of honey. Guests noticed little things—the way the chicken didn’t need heavy sauce, or how the corn evoked late-night street vendors. Conversations unfurled naturally, stories traded like recipes, advice slipped across the table along with napkins.

Ernie’s Chicken, mi cocina, was thus both a dish and an invitation: to slow down, to taste deliberately, to convert ordinary ingredients into a shared memory. It was a small act of hospitality that turned an apartment into a home and a meal into a story people wanted to retell.

When it was time to cook, he warmed his heaviest pan until it hummed. A hot pan, for Ernie, was conversational—one you had to speak to with respect. He seared the chicken skin-side down first, pressing each piece gently so the skin met the metal and released a sound that made his heart quicken: that precious hiss, that asphalt crack of caramelizing sugars. The skin took on brown patches like small, well-earned medals. He flipped the pieces, and the citrus-marinated flesh steamed slightly, releasing perfumed steam that fogged the windows and invited the building’s other kitchens to lean in.

On the plate, Ernie arranged the chicken like a small, private map: a bed of cilantro rice to one side, the charred corn and tomatoes nestling beside it, and the chicken taking center stage, its skin catching the light. He spooned the pan juices—reduced and glossy—over the top, and then a final flourish: a drizzle of that jarred vinaigrette from his grandmother, vinegar brightening the richness, a scatter of fresh cilantro leaves like notes on a page.

Toast to Tradition

Pendleton® Whisky cocktails

Ernies Chicken Recipe Mi Cocina

While the chicken finished, Ernie turned to the accompaniments with the same reverence. He diced ripe tomatoes and folded them into cilantro, minced onion, and a squeeze of lime for a quick pico that tasted like summer in a bowl. He charred corn lightly on the griddle until kernels popped with a smoky snap. If there was stale bread in the cupboard, he’d crisp it into croutons with garlic and olive oil—little islands of texture.

When friends asked for the recipe, Ernie would laugh and give them measurements and method like a teacher giving students a map—enough to find the place, but not a rigid path. “Make it yours,” he’d say. “Leave out the achiote if you can’t find it. Add a roasted pepper if you like. Most of all, don’t rush the marination.” He believed recipes were living things; they thrived on adaptation. ernies chicken recipe mi cocina

When Ernie first stepped into his tiny Miami kitchen, he felt like an apprentice in a warm, fragrant chapel. The apartment was small, but the windows pulled in sunlight that turned the tiles to gold and made the cilantro on the sill glow. Cooking, for Ernie, was less about recipes and more about memory—about the way a single scent could summon a person, a street, a time. While the chicken finished, Ernie turned to the

Eating Ernie’s Chicken was not a performance but a conversation. Each bite offered contrasts: citrus and smoke, crisp skin and tender meat, the herbaceous lift of cilantro against the grounding sweetness of honey. Guests noticed little things—the way the chicken didn’t need heavy sauce, or how the corn evoked late-night street vendors. Conversations unfurled naturally, stories traded like recipes, advice slipped across the table along with napkins. If there was stale bread in the cupboard,

Ernie’s Chicken, mi cocina, was thus both a dish and an invitation: to slow down, to taste deliberately, to convert ordinary ingredients into a shared memory. It was a small act of hospitality that turned an apartment into a home and a meal into a story people wanted to retell.

When it was time to cook, he warmed his heaviest pan until it hummed. A hot pan, for Ernie, was conversational—one you had to speak to with respect. He seared the chicken skin-side down first, pressing each piece gently so the skin met the metal and released a sound that made his heart quicken: that precious hiss, that asphalt crack of caramelizing sugars. The skin took on brown patches like small, well-earned medals. He flipped the pieces, and the citrus-marinated flesh steamed slightly, releasing perfumed steam that fogged the windows and invited the building’s other kitchens to lean in.

On the plate, Ernie arranged the chicken like a small, private map: a bed of cilantro rice to one side, the charred corn and tomatoes nestling beside it, and the chicken taking center stage, its skin catching the light. He spooned the pan juices—reduced and glossy—over the top, and then a final flourish: a drizzle of that jarred vinaigrette from his grandmother, vinegar brightening the richness, a scatter of fresh cilantro leaves like notes on a page.

1910 Bourbon Smash

Bacon Infused Western Manhattan

View all
Slide

Make It Midnight

After a hard day’s work, raise a glass of Pendleton® Whisky Midnight to the day behind us. Best enjoyed neat or on the rocks.

SHOP NOW
Slide

The Hands that build the west

For people who make a living with their hands, every bruise is a badge of honor. Hear their stories, and join us in raising a glass to those who continue to define True Western Tradition.

See the stories
Slide

A Partnership

of Western Tradition

Pendleton® Whisky is proud to be the Official Whisky of the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF) – who help protect and conserve the American West.

SEE OUR PARTNERS

Follow the Pendleton Posse

Catch the Ambassadors of True Western Tradition at an event near you.

No Posse event found.

See more

Be The First To Know About All Things Pendleton® Whisky

From New Promotions to Events and Cocktails

Thanks for signing up!

Be the first to know about limited edition drops, news, and exclusive discounts.

Thanks for signing up!

Links

  • Find Near You
  • Company Info
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookies Settings
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
  • Drink Responsibly
  • FAQ
  • Find Near You
  • Company Info
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookies Settings
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
  • Drink Responsibly
  • FAQ

Follow

  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
  • Pinterest
Buy a Bottle

%!s(int=2026) © %!d(string=Western Gazette)proximospirits.com. Please drink responsibly. LET’ER BUCK and the bucking horse logo are registered trademarks of The Pendleton Round-Up Association. PENDLETON is a registered trademark of Pendleton Woolen Mills.

  • Okjatt Com Movie Punjabi
  • Letspostit 24 07 25 Shrooms Q Mobile Car Wash X...
  • Www Filmyhit Com Punjabi Movies
  • Video Bokep Ukhty Bocil Masih Sekolah Colmek Pakai Botol
  • Xprimehubblog Hot
  • Whiskies
  • Cocktails
  • About us
    • Our Story
    • Pendleton Posse
    • Whisky Hands
    • Our Partners
    • News & Stories
    • Whisky FAQ
  • SHOP
  • Military Edition
Buy a Bottle

live boldly, drink well, and taste the moment

ARE YOU OF LEGAL DRINKING AGE?

Yes
No

You must be of legal drinking age to enter this website. This website uses cookies. By entering this site, I agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.