Half roasted chicken with Guajira sauce — Cuban mojo bird, Mexican guajillo glaze. Just the chicken, just the sauce.
Ask your butcher to halve the chicken — free, takes 30 seconds. At home, pat both halves completely dry with paper towels, including under the skin. Dry skin is what creates the dark lacquered crust. Do this the night before if possible and leave uncovered in the fridge.
Whisk together the orange juice, lime juice, minced garlic, olive oil, oregano, cumin, salt, and pepper. Use a fork to loosen the skin from the breast and thigh meat without tearing it, then push some marinade directly underneath the skin.
Place both chicken halves in a zip-lock bag or deep dish and pour all the mojo over them. Seal and refrigerate. Minimum 4 hours; overnight (up to about 24 hours) is the sweet spot. The mojo seasons the skin and the outer layer of the meat — that's where the flavor and the lacquered crust come from. Acidic marinades don't reach the center no matter how long they sit, and past a day or so the surface starts to turn mushy, so don't overdo it.
⏱ 8 hoursIn a dry skillet over medium heat, press each guajillo chile flat for 20–30 seconds per side until fragrant and slightly darkened — not black or they'll turn bitter. Transfer to a bowl, pour boiling water over them, and soak 20 minutes until fully soft.
⏱ 20 minIn the same dry skillet on high heat, char the Roma tomatoes, onion, and garlic until deeply browned with black spots on multiple sides — about 10 minutes, turning every couple of minutes. This char is what gives the Guajira sauce its dark mahogany color and smoky depth.
⏱ 10 minDrain the soaked chiles and add to a blender with the charred tomatoes, onion, garlic, chicken broth, apple cider vinegar, brown sugar, smoked paprika, and salt. Blend on high for 2 full minutes until completely smooth. It should be deep brick-red, nearly mahogany in color.
Heat 1 tbsp olive oil in a saucepan over medium-high. Pour in the blended sauce carefully — it will splatter. Stir constantly for 2 minutes, then reduce to medium-low and simmer uncovered 25–30 minutes, stirring occasionally. For the smooth, glossy, slightly translucent sauce in the photo, pass it through a fine-mesh sieve once reduced — this strains out the chile skins and pulp and is what gives it that clean restaurant sheen. Then split it: keep a thicker portion (coats a spoon heavily) to glaze the skin, and a looser, pourable portion for the plate. Thin the plating portion with a splash of broth or the chicken's pan drippings until it pools and spreads rather than holding its shape.
⏱ 30 minPull the chicken from the fridge 45 minutes before cooking — cold chicken straight into a hot oven cooks unevenly. Preheat oven to 425°F (220°C).
⏱ 45 minHeat a cast iron or heavy oven-safe skillet over high heat until smoking. Remove chicken from marinade and shake off excess. Place skin-side DOWN — no extra oil. Press gently with a spatula for full contact. Sear without moving for 5 minutes until the skin is deep golden and releases cleanly from the pan.
⏱ 5 minFlip chicken skin-side UP. Brush a thick coat of Guajira sauce all over the skin. Transfer the pan to the oven and roast 25 minutes. Pull out, brush a second heavy coat of sauce onto the skin, then roast another 10–15 minutes until the internal temp at the thickest part of the thigh reads at least 165°F (for more tender dark meat, take the thigh to 175–185°F — it stays juicy at the higher temp) and the skin is dark, caramelized, and glossy.
⏱ 25 min · first roast ⏱ 15 min · after 2nd coatRemove from oven and rest uncovered on a cutting board for 10 full minutes. Non-negotiable — the juices redistribute and the meat stays moist when cut.
⏱ 10 minSpoon a generous pool of the looser, strained Guajira sauce onto a wide flat plate and let it spread. Place the half chicken directly on top, skin-side up. Spoon one more drizzle over the chicken. That's it — just the bird and the sauce.
This dish marries two traditions: the marinade is a classic Cuban mojo (sour citrus, garlic, oregano, cumin), while the glaze is a Mexican-style guajillo chile sauce. Neither half is "wrong" — it's a deliberate fusion, so don't expect it to taste like a strictly traditional Cuban or Mexican dish. It tastes like both at once.
Two coats of Guajira sauce brushed onto the skin during roasting — not after. Each coat caramelizes in the oven, building the deeply colored, glossy crust you see in the photo. Don't skip the second coat at the 25-minute mark.
Skin-side down in a smoking-hot dry cast iron pan before the oven. This is how restaurants get that crackling dark crust — the stovetop sear locks it in before the sauce goes on. Skipping it means the skin steams instead of crisping.
The citrus and garlic in the mojo season the skin and the outer layer of meat — that's where the flavor and the lacquered crust live. Acidic marinades don't penetrate to the center no matter how long you wait, and past about a day the surface starts to turn mushy. A 4-hour marinade is okay; overnight (up to roughly 24 hours) is the sweet spot.
165°F is the safe minimum everywhere on the bird, but thigh and leg meat is more tender and less rubbery when taken to 175–185°F — the extra connective tissue needs the higher temp to break down, and dark meat stays juicy there. Check the thickest part of the thigh, not the breast.
You actually want two consistencies. The portion you brush on the skin should be thick — coats a spoon heavily — so it clings and lacquers. The portion you pool on the plate should be looser and pourable, so it spreads into that glossy puddle in the photo instead of sitting in a mound. And strain the reduced sauce through a fine-mesh sieve: that's what gives it the smooth, slightly translucent sheen. An unstrained blend comes out more opaque and rustic — still good, just not the restaurant look.
Pool the sauce on the plate first, then set the chicken directly on top skin-side up. The sauce stays under and around the bird — you're not pouring it on top. One small extra drizzle over the skin right before serving.
The Guajira sauce keeps refrigerated for up to a week and freezes perfectly. Make a double batch — it's excellent on anything.