Nashville hot wings with a dill pickle brine deliver crispy skin, bold spice, and a tangy backbone that cuts through the heat. The wings brine in pickle juice for up to 2 hours, then dry off and get hit with poultry seasoning before grilling. They cook over direct heat at 300 to 350°F until they hit 185°F internal for juicy dark meat with crackling skin. Then they toss in a Nashville-style butter glaze loaded with cayenne, brown sugar, smoked paprika, and pickle juice. Total cook runs about 30 to 40 minutes after the brine and serves 4 to 6.
Why the Pickle Brine Changes the Game
Salt and Vinegar Get Deep Into the Meat
Dill pickle juice is essentially a salt-vinegar-spice brine in disguise. The salt penetrates the muscle and helps the wings hold moisture during the cook, while the vinegar mildly tenderizes the protein fibers. Furthermore, the dill, garlic, and pickling spices from the brine carry into the meat and add a tangy backbone that pairs perfectly with the heavy spice load of the Nashville hot glaze.
Two Hours Is the Sweet Spot, Not Overnight
Cap the brine at 2 hours in the fridge. Longer than that and the salt pulls too much moisture out, leaving the wings chalky and dense instead of juicy. Consequently, this is a quick-brine recipe meant to fit between prep and grill time. Set the brine when you preheat the smoker or start the charcoal chimney and the timing lines up perfectly.
The Nashville Hot Glaze Built on Butter, Not Lard
Butter Carries the Spice Without Greasing the Skin
Traditional Nashville hot chicken uses rendered lard or frying oil from the cook as the base for the spice paste. This recipe uses melted butter instead, which carries the spices just as well but rinses off the palate faster and does not leave the wings greasy. Moreover, butter blends cleanly with the pickle juice in the glaze and emulsifies into a clinging sauce that coats every crevice in the wing skin.
Brown Sugar Balances the Cayenne Burn
The 1/4 cup of brown sugar is not optional. Cayenne hits the front of the tongue with raw heat, and without sweetness to round it out the burn dominates the entire bite. Therefore the brown sugar smooths the cayenne into a deeper warmth and also helps the glaze caramelize when it hits the warm wings off the grill.
Pickle Juice in the Sauce Doubles Down on the Brine
Adding 2 tablespoons of pickle juice back into the glaze reinforces the flavor the wings already absorbed during the brine. As a result, every layer of the wing carries the pickle backbone, from the meat itself through the seasoning to the final sauce. The vinegar in the pickle juice also cuts the richness of the butter and keeps the glaze from feeling heavy.
Grilling Wings Hot for Crispy Skin
300 to 350°F Direct Heat Is the Right Range
Preheat the grill or smoker to 300 to 350°F and set the wings directly over the heat source. This range is hot enough to render the skin’s fat and crisp the surface, but cool enough that the residual sugar from the pickle brine does not scorch and turn bitter. In contrast, full sear temps above 400°F will burn the brine sugars before the meat finishes cooking.
Flip Every Few Minutes for Even Char
Wings have an irregular shape, so a single flip is not enough to get even cooking. Flip every 3 to 4 minutes and rotate positions on the grate so the wings closer to hot spots swap with the cooler edges. Additionally, watch for flare-ups since the rendering fat can ignite over direct flame. Move wings off the worst flare-ups for a minute, then bring them back.
Pull at 185°F, Not 165°F
Dark Meat Wants Higher Internal Temperature
The USDA safe minimum for chicken is 165°F, but wings are dark meat with more connective tissue and intramuscular fat than breast meat. At 165°F the meat is technically safe but still chewy and dense. Therefore, you want to push wings further to fully render the collagen and the fat into juicy, tender bites.
185°F Renders Fat Without Drying Out the Meat
Pull the wings at 185°F internal in the thickest part of the drumette. At this temperature the collagen has broken down, the fat under the skin has rendered, and the meat pulls cleanly from the bone. As a result, the wings stay juicy because the fat that rendered out is now sitting on the surface as crispy skin instead of drying the muscle inside.
Saucing and Serving
Toss in the Glaze Right Off the Grill
Transfer the wings from the grill straight into a large bowl with the warm glaze poured over the top. Toss with tongs until every wing is fully coated. Doing this while the wings are still hot lets the butter glaze cling to the skin instead of pooling at the bottom of the bowl. Furthermore, the residual heat slightly cooks the glaze into a sticky, lacquered finish.
Ranch and Pickles for Cooling Contrast
Serve the wings with a side of ranch dressing for cooling fat and dill pickle chips for crunch and extra acid. The ranch tames the cayenne heat between bites, and the pickles double down on the brine flavor already in the meat. Additionally, celery and blue cheese work as classic alternatives if you want a more traditional wing setup.
Nashville Hot Pickle Brined Wings
Dill pickle brine · Grilled at 300-350°F · Pulled at 185°F · Tossed in Nashville butter glaze
Ingredients
The Wings
- 2 lbs chicken wings
- Dill pickle juice, enough to fully cover the wings
- Your favorite poultry seasoning, to coat
Nashville Hot Pickle Glaze
- 8 oz unsalted butter
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 1 tbsp cayenne pepper
- 2 tsp smoked paprika
- 2 tsp garlic powder
- 1 tsp onion powder
- 1 tsp chili powder
- 2 tbsp pickle juice
- 1 tbsp hot sauce
Cap the Brine at 2 Hours
Longer brines pull too much moisture out and leave the wings chalky. 2 hours is the sweet spot for flavor without overdoing the salt.
Pull at 185°F
Dark meat needs higher temp than 165°F to fully render collagen and fat. 185°F gives juicy meat with crispy, crackling skin.
Pat Bone-Dry Before Seasoning
Wet skin steams instead of crisps. Pat the wings completely dry with paper towels after the brine, then hit them with seasoning.
Step-by-Step: How to Make Nashville Hot Pickle Brined Wings
Step 1: Brine the Wings in Dill Pickle Juice
Place the wings in a bowl or container and cover them completely with dill pickle juice. Brine in the fridge for up to 2 hours maximum, no longer. The salt and vinegar in the brine penetrate the meat and lay the flavor foundation for the rest of the recipe.
Step 2: Pat Completely Dry and Season
Pull the wings from the brine and pat them bone-dry with paper towels. Wet skin steams instead of crisps. Coat the wings generously with your favorite poultry seasoning, pressing it into the skin so it sticks during the grill.
Step 3: Make the Nashville Hot Pickle Glaze
In a saucepan over low heat, combine 8 oz butter, 1/4 cup brown sugar, 1 tbsp cayenne, 2 tsp smoked paprika, 2 tsp garlic powder, 1 tsp onion powder, 1 tsp chili powder, 2 tbsp pickle juice, and 1 tbsp hot sauce. Whisk until the butter melts and the glaze is smooth. Keep warm while the wings finish on the grill.
Step 4: Grill at 300-350°F Direct Heat
Preheat the grill to 300-350°F. Place the wings directly over the heat and grill for about 25-35 minutes, flipping every 3-4 minutes for an even char and crispy skin all around. Move wings away from any flare-ups, then bring them back once the flames settle.
Step 5: Pull at 185°F Internal Temperature
Probe the thickest part of the drumette. Pull the wings when they hit 185°F internal. The higher temperature renders the fat and breaks down the collagen in the dark meat, leaving juicy bites with crackling skin instead of chewy meat at 165°F.
Step 6: Toss in the Glaze and Serve
Transfer the wings straight from the grill into a large bowl. Pour the warm Nashville hot pickle glaze over the top and toss with tongs until every wing is fully coated. Serve hot with ranch dressing, dill pickles, or whatever sides you like.

Nashville Hot Pickle Brined Wings
Ingredients
- 2 lbs chicken wings
- dill pickle juice enough to fully cover the wings
- poultry seasoning your favorite, enough to coat
- 8 oz unsalted butter
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 1 tbsp cayenne pepper
- 2 tsp smoked paprika
- 2 tsp garlic powder
- 1 tsp onion powder
- 1 tsp chili powder
- 2 tbsp pickle juice
- 1 tbsp hot sauce
Method
- Place the wings in a bowl or container and cover them completely with dill pickle juice. Brine in the fridge for up to 2 hours maximum.
- Pull the wings from the brine and pat them bone-dry with paper towels. Coat generously with your favorite poultry seasoning, pressing it into the skin.
- In a saucepan over low heat, combine the butter, brown sugar, cayenne, smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, chili powder, pickle juice, and hot sauce. Whisk until the butter melts and the glaze is smooth. Keep warm.
- Preheat the grill to 300-350°F. Place the wings directly over the heat and grill for 25-35 minutes, flipping every 3-4 minutes for an even char and crispy skin.
- Pull the wings when they hit 185°F internal in the thickest part of the drumette. The higher temperature renders the dark meat fat and collagen for juicy, tender bites.
- Transfer the wings to a large bowl, pour the warm glaze over the top, and toss with tongs until every wing is fully coated. Serve hot with ranch dressing and dill pickles.
Notes
Tried this recipe?
Let us know how it was!Nashville Hot Pickle Brined Wings — FAQ
Everything you need to nail Nashville hot wings with a dill pickle brine.
Setup & Basics
2 hours max in the fridge. Longer than that and the salt in the brine pulls too much moisture out of the meat, leaving the wings chalky and dense instead of juicy. Two hours is plenty for the salt, vinegar, and pickling spices to penetrate.
Dill pickle juice from a standard jar works best. The salt-vinegar-dill profile cuts through the rich dark meat. Avoid sweet or bread-and-butter pickle juice since the sugar throws off the savory glaze later. Spicy dill juice works too and adds a small heat bump.
Yes. Thaw them completely first in the fridge overnight, then pat dry before brining. Frozen-then-brined wings hold the moisture better than ones that go into pickle juice while still icy, since the ice crystals block the brine from penetrating evenly.
300 to 350°F over direct heat. This is hot enough to crisp the skin and char the surface, but not so hot that the residual sugar from the pickle brine scorches and turns bitter. Full sear temps above 400°F will burn the brine sugars before the meat finishes cooking through.
Technique & Troubleshooting
Wings are dark meat. The connective tissue and fat need higher temperatures to fully render. At 165°F the meat is technically cooked but still chewy. At 185°F the collagen breaks down and the fat renders, leaving juicy bites with crispy crackling skin instead of rubbery texture.
Medium-hot. The 1 tbsp cayenne and 1 tbsp hot sauce deliver real heat, but the butter and brown sugar round it out. For mild, cut the cayenne to 1 tsp. For extra hot, add another tablespoon of cayenne or swap in a hotter sauce like habanero or ghost pepper based.
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