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Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk-Spiced Chicken with Guava Glaze Recipe

Post Update March 28, 2026

Ainsley Harriott’s Junkanoo Jerk-Spiced Chicken with Guava Glaze is a bold, festive Caribbean dish that combines the fiery heat of classic jerk seasoning with a sweet, tropical guava glaze — inspired by the legendary Junkanoo street carnival of Nassau, Bahamas. Ready in under an hour, this show-stopping recipe brings the spirit of the Bahamas straight to your dinner table.

Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk Chicken Ingredients

Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk-Spiced Chicken with Guava Glaze Recipe
For the Jerk Spice Rub
    • 4 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs and 4 drumsticks
    • 1 tsp ground allspice
    • 1 tsp smoked paprika
    • ½ tsp ground cinnamon
    • ½ tsp ground nutmeg
    • ½ tsp ground black pepper
    • 1 tsp dried thyme
    • 1 tsp garlic powder
    • 1 tsp onion powder
    • 1 Scotch bonnet chilli, de-seeded and finely chopped
    • 1 tbsp dark soy sauce
    • 1 tbsp olive oil
    • Juice of 1 lime
    • 1 tsp sea salt
For the Guava Glaze
    • 4 tbsp guava jam or guava jelly
    • 1 tbsp dark rum
    • 1 tbsp lime juice
    • 1 tsp hot pepper sauce (Caribbean style)
    • 1 tsp brown sugar
    • Pinch of sea salt
To Serve
    • Rice and peas
    • Fresh lime wedges
    • Sliced spring onions and red chilli, to garnish

How To Make Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk Chicken

    1. Make the jerk rub: In a large bowl, combine all the dry spices — allspice, paprika, cinnamon, nutmeg, black pepper, dried thyme, garlic powder, and onion powder. Add the Scotch bonnet, dark soy sauce, olive oil, lime juice, and sea salt. Mix into a thick paste.
    1. Marinate: Score the chicken pieces deeply with a sharp knife — 2–3 cuts per piece. Add to the spice paste and rub thoroughly into every cut and under the skin. Cover and refrigerate for a minimum of 2 hours, ideally overnight.
    1. Preheat: Bring the chicken to room temperature 30 minutes before cooking. Preheat your oven to 200°C (180°C fan / Gas 6).
    1. Roast: Place chicken pieces skin-side up on a wire rack over a roasting tin. Roast for 35–40 minutes until the skin is deeply charred and the juices run clear.
    1. Make the glaze: While the chicken roasts, combine guava jam, dark rum, lime juice, hot pepper sauce, brown sugar, and sea salt in a small saucepan. Heat over medium heat, stirring for 3–4 minutes until smooth, glossy, and slightly thickened.
    1. Glaze the chicken: In the last 8 minutes of cooking, brush the guava glaze generously over every piece of chicken. Return to the oven for the final 8 minutes until the glaze caramelises and turns sticky and deeply glossy.
    1. Rest and serve: Remove from the oven and rest for 5 minutes. Garnish with sliced spring onions and red chilli. Serve over rice and peas with fresh lime wedges.

Recipe Tips

    • Score deeply: The deeper you cut the chicken, the more the jerk marinade penetrates the flesh and the more the guava glaze seeps into the meat during the final roast.
    • Guava jam substitute: If you can’t find guava jam, mango chutney mixed with a tablespoon of apricot jam gives a very similar tropical sweetness. Caribbean supermarkets or online retailers stock guava jelly year-round.
    • Scotch bonnet heat: De-seeded, one Scotch bonnet gives medium heat. Keep the seeds for authentic Bahamian fire, or replace entirely with 1 tsp of hot pepper sauce for a milder family-friendly version.
    • Char is flavour: Don’t be alarmed when the skin looks very dark — that blackened, charred exterior is exactly what makes jerk chicken taste authentic. It should be dark, not pale.
    • Glaze timing: Apply the guava glaze only in the last 8 minutes. Applied too early, the sugar in the jam burns before the chicken is cooked through.

💡 Make It Your Own Recipe — Creative Twists

    • Swap guava for passion fruit curd mixed with a teaspoon of honey for a sharper, more floral tropical glaze that works beautifully with the smoky jerk spices
    • Use the jerk spice rub on whole cauliflower steaks — roast at 200°C for 25 minutes and glaze with guava exactly the same way for a stunning vegetarian centrepiece
    • Turn leftovers into jerk chicken tacos — shred the cold glazed chicken and pile into warm flour tortillas with Caribbean coleslaw, sliced avocado, and a squeeze of lime for a next-day Caribbean taco night
    • Add a tablespoon of peanut butter to the guava glaze for a Caribbean-Asian peanut-guava sauce that pairs unexpectedly brilliantly with the jerk spices
    • Combine with the Bahamian Coleslaw recipe already on your site — the cool, creamy citrus slaw is the perfect contrast to the sticky, fiery glazed chicken and makes a complete Nassau-inspired feast
    • Replace dark rum in the glaze with coconut rum for a sweeter, more tropical Malibu-style glaze that softens the heat and adds a creamy coconut note
    • Double the guava glaze and use half as a dipping sauce on the side — it transforms the dish into a proper party-style platter

Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk-Spiced Chicken with Guava Glaze Recipe

Emily CarterEmily Carter
Ainsley Harriott's Junkanoo Jerk-Spiced Chicken with Guava Glaze is a bold, festive Caribbean dish combining fiery jerk seasoning with a sweet tropical guava and rum glaze. Inspired by the legendary Junkanoo street carnival of Nassau, Bahamas — as seen on Ainsley's Taste of the Bahamas on ITV.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Marinating Time 2 hours
Total Time 1 hour
Course Main Course
Cuisine Bahamian, Caribbean
Servings 4 servings
Calories 395 kcal

Equipment

  • Oven
  • Wire Rack
  • Roasting Tin
  • Small Saucepan
  • Sharp Knife
  • Pastry Brush

Ingredients
  

For the Jerk Spice Rub

  • 4 bone-in skin-on chicken thighs scored deeply with a sharp knife
  • 4 chicken drumsticks scored deeply with a sharp knife
  • 1 tsp ground allspice
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
  • 1/2 tsp ground black pepper
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • 1 Scotch bonnet chilli de-seeded and finely chopped
  • 1 tbsp dark soy sauce use tamari for gluten-free
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 lime juice only
  • 1 tsp sea salt

For the Guava Glaze

  • 4 tbsp guava jam or guava jelly Grace or Walkerswood brand recommended
  • 1 tbsp dark rum
  • 1 tbsp lime juice
  • 1 tsp Caribbean hot pepper sauce
  • 1 tsp brown sugar
  • pinch of sea salt

To Serve

  • rice and peas
  • fresh lime wedges
  • sliced spring onions and red chilli to garnish

Instructions
 

  • In a large bowl, combine all the dry spices — allspice, smoked paprika, cinnamon, nutmeg, black pepper, dried thyme, garlic powder, and onion powder. Add the Scotch bonnet, dark soy sauce, olive oil, lime juice, and sea salt. Mix into a thick paste.
  • Score the chicken pieces deeply with a sharp knife — 2 to 3 cuts per piece. Add to the spice paste and rub thoroughly into every cut and under the skin. Cover and refrigerate for a minimum of 2 hours, ideally overnight.
  • Remove the chicken from the fridge 30 minutes before cooking to bring to room temperature. Preheat your oven to 200°C (180°C fan / Gas 6).
  • Place chicken pieces skin-side up on a wire rack over a roasting tin. Roast for 35–40 minutes until the skin is deeply charred and the juices run clear when the thickest part is pierced.
  • While the chicken roasts, combine guava jam, dark rum, lime juice, hot pepper sauce, brown sugar, and a pinch of sea salt in a small saucepan. Heat over medium heat, stirring for 3–4 minutes until smooth, glossy, and slightly thickened.
  • In the last 8 minutes of cooking, brush the guava glaze generously over every piece of chicken. Return to the oven for the final 8 minutes until the glaze caramelises and turns sticky and deeply glossy.
  • Remove from the oven and rest for 5 minutes. Garnish with sliced spring onions and red chilli. Serve over rice and peas with fresh lime wedges on the side.

Video

Notes

Score the chicken deeply — the deeper the cuts, the more the jerk marinade and guava glaze penetrate the flesh. Apply the guava glaze only in the last 8 minutes to prevent the sugar burning before the chicken is cooked through.
Gluten-free: Swap dark soy sauce for tamari and check your hot pepper sauce label.
No guava jam? Use mango chutney mixed with 1 tbsp apricot jam as a substitute.
Keyword Ainsley Harriott, Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk Chicken, Ainsley Taste of the Bahamas, Bahamian Recipe, Caribbean Chicken, Guava Glazed Chicken, Jerk Chicken Guava Glaze

What To Serve With Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk Chicken

    • Rice and Peas: The essential Jamaican base — coconut milk and kidney beans soak up the guava glaze that drips from the chicken
    • Ainsley’s Bahamian-Style Coleslaw: The cool, ginger-lime slaw perfectly cuts through the sticky, fiery glaze
    • Fried Plantain: Sweet caramelised plantain echoes the guava sweetness and adds a proper Caribbean side
    • Corn on the Cob: Grilled with lime butter, a recurring Ainsley pairing throughout his Bahamas series
    • Carnival Rum Punch: Serve with a rum punch cocktail to complete the full Junkanoo festival experience

How To Store Ainsley Harriott Junkanoo Jerk Chicken

    • Refrigerate: Store cooked chicken in an airtight container for up to 3 days. Cold leftovers are excellent shredded into sandwiches, tacos, or salads.
    • Freeze: Freeze cooked chicken (without glaze) for up to 2 months. Make fresh guava glaze when reheating. Defrost fully in the fridge overnight before reheating.
    • Reheat: Reheat in the oven at 180°C for 15 minutes covered with foil, then uncover for 5 minutes. Brush with a little fresh guava glaze to revive the sticky coating.
    • Marinated raw chicken: The jerk-marinated uncooked chicken can be frozen for up to 1 month — ideal for meal prepping ahead of a BBQ or dinner party.

Nutrition Facts (per serving, based on 4 servings)

Nutrient Amount
Calories ~395 kcal
Protein 38g
Carbohydrates 14g
Fat 19g
Saturates 4.5g
Sugar 10g
Salt 1.6g

FAQs

Where can I buy guava jam in the UK?

Guava jam and guava jelly are widely available in Caribbean food shops, the world foods aisle of larger supermarkets (Tesco, Sainsbury’s), and on Amazon. Brands like Grace and Walkerswood stock it reliably year-round.

Can I make this on the barbecue instead of the oven?

Absolutely — and it’s arguably even better. Grill over indirect heat with the lid closed for 35–40 minutes, then move directly over the coals for the final 5 minutes while brushing on the guava glaze for maximum char and caramelisation.

Is this recipe gluten-free?

Swap the dark soy sauce in the marinade for tamari (gluten-free soy sauce) and check your hot pepper sauce label. All other ingredients are naturally gluten-free.

What is Junkanoo?

Junkanoo is the iconic Bahamian street carnival celebrated on Boxing Day and New Year’s Day in Nassau — a riot of music, elaborate costumes, and street food. Ainsley’s recipe is a direct tribute to the festival’s bold, celebratory spirit.

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