Pollo Asado (Mexican Grilled Chicken)

Category: Dinner Recipes

Charred edges, citrusy brightness, and that deep orange-red color from achiote make pollo asado the kind of grilled chicken people remember. The marinade doesn’t just sit on the surface; it seasons the meat all the way through and leaves you with chicken that’s smoky, tangy, and juicy enough to slice for tacos or serve straight off the grill.

What makes this version work is the balance. Orange juice brings sweetness and helps the achiote bloom, lime juice keeps everything lively, and olive oil carries the garlic and spices so they coat evenly. Achiote paste is the ingredient you don’t want to skip here — it gives the chicken its signature color and earthy, slightly peppery depth that plain paprika can’t fully replace.

Below, I’m walking through the parts that matter most: how long to marinate, how to keep the chicken from drying out on the grill, and what to change if you’re working with breasts instead of mixed pieces.

The marinade gave the chicken that deep orange color and the grill marks came out gorgeous. I used thighs and let it go overnight, and the meat stayed juicy even after slicing for tacos.

★★★★★— Maria R.

Save this pollo asado for the nights when you want charred, citrus-marinated chicken with real grilled flavor and taco-ready leftovers.

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The Marinade Timing That Keeps Pollo Asado Juicy, Not Dry

The biggest mistake with grilled chicken like this is treating the marinade like a quick seasoning paste. It needs time to work, especially if you’re using bone-in pieces or a whole bird. Four hours is the minimum that gives you noticeable flavor; overnight is even better if you want the citrus, garlic, and achiote to settle into the meat instead of sitting on the surface.

The other thing that matters is heat control. Pollo asado should get color fast, but if the grill is too hot, the outside darkens before the inside cooks through. Medium-high heat gives you those charred spots without burning the marinade, and turning the chicken occasionally helps the sugars in the citrus caramelize instead of blackening.

  • Achiote paste — This is what gives the chicken its signature color and earthy flavor. If you can’t find it, the closest stand-in is a mix of paprika and a little extra cumin, but the result won’t taste the same.
  • Orange and lime juice — Orange softens the sharpness of the lime and helps the chicken brown. Lime brings the bright edge that makes pollo asado taste fresh instead of heavy.
  • Chicken pieces or whole chicken — Pieces cook more evenly and faster, while a whole chicken gives you a more dramatic presentation. If you use breasts, watch them closely because they dry out before thighs do.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Grill Marinade

Pollo Asado Mexican Grilled Chicken charred citrus-marinated
  • Chicken pieces — Bone-in, skin-on pieces stay juicier on the grill and handle the marinade beautifully. A whole chicken works too, but it needs more attention so the dark meat and breast finish at the same time.
  • Orange juice — Fresh orange juice gives the cleanest citrus flavor and helps the marinade cling. Bottled juice works in a pinch, but avoid anything with added sugar because it can scorch.
  • Lime juice — This is the sharper acid in the marinade. It wakes up the spices and keeps the chicken from tasting flat.
  • Olive oil — Oil helps the marinade coat the chicken evenly and keeps the garlic and spices from drying out on the grill. Don’t skip it unless you’re planning to cook the chicken a different way.
  • Garlic, cumin, oregano, chili powder — These are the backbone of the seasoning. Fresh garlic matters here; garlic powder won’t give the same punch.

Getting the Smoke, Char, and Internal Temperature in Sync

Building the marinade

Blend the orange juice, lime juice, olive oil, garlic, achiote paste, cumin, oregano, chili powder, salt, and pepper until the achiote is fully dissolved and the mixture looks smooth. If there are little red-orange flecks left, that’s fine; if the paste stays in clumps, it won’t coat the chicken evenly. Pour it over the chicken and turn everything until every piece is covered. The chicken should look stained, not just lightly brushed.

Marinating long enough for real flavor

Refrigerate the chicken for 4 to 24 hours. Less than 4 hours gives you surface flavor only, and more than 24 hours can start to dull the texture because of the citrus. If you’re using boneless cuts, err on the shorter side. If you’re using bone-in pieces or a whole chicken, the longer marination pays off.

Grilling to char without burning

Preheat the grill to medium-high and oil the grates if they tend to stick. Put the chicken on and let it sear before moving it too much; you want those dark grill marks and some charred edges. Turn occasionally and keep an eye on any flare-ups from the marinade dripping into the coals or burner. For whole chicken pieces, the total time is usually 30 to 40 minutes, and the safest check is an instant-read thermometer in the thickest part of the meat.

Resting before you slice

Let the chicken rest for 10 minutes after grilling. If you cut it right away, the juices run out and the meat tastes drier than it should. Resting also helps the achiote crust set a little so the slices hold together when you pile them into tortillas.

Three Ways to Work This Pollo Asado Into Your Week

Use thighs for the juiciest result

Boneless or bone-in thighs stay tender even if the grill runs a little hot. They also take the marinade beautifully, so the finished chicken tastes richer and more forgiving than breast meat.

Make it dairy-free and naturally gluten-free

This recipe already fits both as written, which is one reason it’s so easy to serve to a crowd. Just watch the tortillas you serve on the side if you need to keep the whole meal gluten-free.

Turn it into taco filling or meal prep bowls

Slice the grilled chicken and serve it with tortillas, rice, beans, or crisp lettuce. The flavor holds up well for leftovers, and the charred edges make it taste even better the next day.

Scale it up for a crowd

Double the marinade cleanly if you’re grilling for a party, but keep the chicken in a single layer while it marinates. If the pieces are stacked too tightly, the seasoning can’t reach every surface evenly.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 4 days. The flavor deepens, though the exterior won’t stay as crisp.
  • Freezer: Freezes well for up to 2 months if you slice the chicken first and pack it tightly. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently in a skillet over medium-low heat or in a covered oven dish at 325°F until warm. High heat dries out the leaner pieces fast, especially breast meat.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use chicken breasts instead of a whole chicken or pieces?+

Yes, but breasts cook faster and dry out more easily. Keep the heat moderate and pull them as soon as they reach 165°F in the thickest part. If you can, pound them to an even thickness so they cook at the same rate.

How do I know when the chicken is done on the grill?+

The safest check is an instant-read thermometer: 165°F for breast meat and 175°F for thighs if you want them extra tender. The outside should be charred in spots and the juices should run clear, not pink. If the chicken is dark on the outside before it’s done inside, move it to a cooler part of the grill.

Can I marinate pollo asado overnight?+

Yes, and overnight gives the best flavor for this recipe. The citrus is strong enough to season the chicken, but not so acidic that it turns the meat mushy by morning. Just don’t go much past 24 hours.

How do I keep the marinade from burning on the grill?+

Shake off excess marinade before the chicken goes on the grill so you don’t get thick puddles of sauce dripping into the flame. Medium-high heat is enough for color without scorching, and turning the chicken a few times helps the sugars caramelize instead of blackening.

What do I do with leftover pollo asado?+

Slice it and use it for tacos, rice bowls, quesadillas, or chopped salads. The flavor holds up well after refrigeration, and the charred edges make the leftovers taste like they were made for a second meal. Reheat gently so the meat stays juicy.

Pollo Asado - Mexican Grilled Chicken

Pollo asado delivers charred, citrus-marinated Mexican grilled chicken with an orange-red achiote color. Blend a citrus-achiote marinade, marinate for hours, then grill until cooked through with smoky char spots.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Marinating 4 hours
Total Time 4 hours 45 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Mexican

Ingredients
  

Chicken pieces
  • 3 lb chicken pieces Use pieces or a whole chicken cut into parts.
Citrus and oil marinade
  • 0.25 cup orange juice
  • 0.25 cup lime juice
  • 0.25 cup olive oil
  • 4 clove garlic Minced.
Achiote and spices
  • 2 tbsp achiote paste
  • 1 tbsp cumin
  • 1 tsp oregano
  • 1 tsp chili powder
  • 1 salt To taste.
  • 1 pepper To taste.

Equipment

  • 1 grill

Method
 

Make the marinade
  1. Blend orange juice, lime juice, olive oil, garlic, achiote paste, cumin, oregano, chili powder, salt, and pepper until smooth and evenly colored.
Marinate
  1. Marinate the chicken in the refrigerator for 4-24 hours, turning once halfway if possible.
Grill the chicken
  1. Preheat the grill to medium-high heat.
  2. Grill chicken, turning occasionally, until cooked through and charred in spots, about 30-40 minutes for whole chicken.
Rest and serve
  1. Let the grilled chicken rest for 10 minutes to keep it juicy.
  2. Serve with warm tortillas, lime wedges, and cilantro.

Notes

Pro tip: for the best char, blot the chicken lightly after marinating so the marinade doesn’t steam on the grates. Store leftovers in the refrigerator up to 3 days; freeze cooked chicken up to 2 months. For a dairy-free option, the recipe is already naturally dairy-free; for lower-sodium, use reduced-salt salt blends or less added salt.

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