Why This Recipe Works
Most wing recipes rely on buffalo sauce or dry rubs. This one takes a different route: a beer-mustard glaze that balances tangy German mustard with the malty sweetness of Oktoberfest beer. The glaze reduces down to a sticky, glossy coating that clings to every wing without making them soggy.
The key is getting the wings crispy first, then glazing at the end. Sauce too early and the sugar burns. Glaze after cooking and you get wings that are crispy on the outside with that sweet-tangy coating that doesn't quit.
The Big Joe at 400°F gives you the perfect temperature for rendering fat and crisping skin without drying out the meat. The ceramic construction holds heat steady so every wing cooks evenly—no burnt tips or undercooked drumettes.
Why the Big Joe is Perfect for This
Wings need two things: high heat to crisp the skin and even heat distribution so they all finish at the same time. The Big Joe delivers both.
With 24 inches of cooking space, you can spread 2 pounds of wings in a single layer with room to spare. No stacking, no rotating—just consistent heat hitting every wing. The ceramic construction radiates heat from all sides, so you're crisping skin top and bottom simultaneously.
At 400°F, the Big Joe creates the ideal environment for rendering chicken fat. Too low and wings stay rubbery. Too high and skin burns before the interior reaches 175°F. The ceramic holds 400°F rock-steady for the full hour-long cook, which is tough for gas or charcoal grills to maintain consistently.