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The Right Grill for Your Barbecue By Jerry PowellRead about Cooking-Tips on erreur404.info. This article about "The Right Grill for Your Barbecue By Jerry Powell" will help you with the Cooking-Tips. erreur404.info specializes in Cooking-Tips. As part of Cooking-Tips your website, you also need to be aware of all everything out there so we are provideing these articles for you as reference. Barbecue is a mix of talents. There is the choice of meat (or in some cases vegetables), the creation and choice of sauce, and of course the flame. Once the components are gathered together, then the real talent starts with the maintenance of the flame, smoke, turnings and sauce applications. We are going to focus on the flame, and the types of flame sources for our barbecue. There are basically three main sources in use today: Wood, Charcoal, and Natural gas or propane. Natural gas and propane Gas grills are easy to light. The heat is easy to control (via knob-controlled gas valves on the burners), so the outcome is very predictable. They result in a very consistent and tasty result, although some charcoal purists argue it lacks the flavors available only from cooking with charcoal. Advocates of gas grills claim that gas cooking lets you "taste the meat, not the heat" because it is claimed that charcoal grills may deposit traces of coal tar on the food. Many grills are equipped with thermometers, further simplifying the barbecuing experience. However propane and natural gas produce a "wet" heat that can change the texture of foods cooked over such fuels. Gas grills are significantly more expensive due to their added complexity, and higher heat. They are also considered much cleaner as they do not result in ashes (which must be disposed of) and also in terms of air pollution. Proper maintenance may further help reduce pollution. Charcoal This generally begins with purchasing a bag of processed charcoal briquettes. A charcoal chimney starter is a traditional (but generally underused) method for getting a consistent heat from your coals. Alternatively, they can be lit in a pyramid directly inside the charcoal grill after presoaking with lighter fluid. After all coals are ashed-over (generally 15-25 minutes), they are spread around the perimeter of the grill, and the meat is placed in the center for indirect cooking. For additional flavor and attractive appearance, thicker cuts of meat may optionally be seared over direct heat (outer perimeter of grill) prior to indirect cooking in the center. Water-soaked wood chips (such as mesquite, hickory, or fruit trees) are often added atop the coals for an extra smoky flavor. The temperature of the grill is controlled by the amount and distribution of coal within the grill and through careful venting. An alternative to charcoal briquettes is lump charcoal. Lump charcoal is wood that has been turned into charcoal but unlike briquettes it has not been ground and shaped. Lump charcoal is a pure form of charcoal and is preferred by many purists who fear that artificial binders may be used to hold briquettes in their shape. Wood The choice and combination of woods burned result in different flavors imparted to the meat. Different types of wood burn at different temperatures. The heat also varies by the amount of wood and controlling the rate of burn through careful venting. The type of wood chosen is really what sets this method apart from the others. This is where the gourmet can really experiment. Let's go through some of the woods available to get a feel for the differences we can expect. Golden Birch is very delicate & slightly sweet, typically used with fish, pork, lamb, goat, poultry, and light-meat game birds. As a smoke source Golden birch would be used to smoke Salmon. Wild Apple is slightly sweet with a fruity smoke flavor. Used mainly for beef, poultry, game birds, and pork (particularly hams). Sugar Maple has a mild smoky, sweet flavor. Good with lamb, goat, pork, poultry, cheese, vegetables and small game birds. White Cedar has a fine light smoke, and doesn't add much in the way of other flavors. Ideal for cooking fish, beef, and pork. Wild Black Cherry, is hard to get a hold of but offers a distinctively sweet and fruity smoke. Great with beef, poultry & game birds. QuitSmokingRightNow. - Quit smoking right now without patches, pills or gums, and without gaining any extra weight - guaranteed. Feed Blaster - Advertising Revolution. - Your ad right to the screens of millions in 15 minutes with feed blaster! Jerry Powell is the Owner of a Popular site Know as Gourmet911.com. As you can see from our name, we are here to help you learn more about different kinds of Gourmet food and Wines, Coffees from all around the world. http://www.gourmet911.com Article Index: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
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OTHER ARTICLES 6 Steps to Grill the Perfect Steak By Laura Bankston There's nothing better than a nicely grilled juicy steak.But how come I can't duplicate that restaurant, expensive, juicy, melt-in-your mouth, perfectly grilled steak?Well, I found out how to grill steak perfectly - and here's how you can too.1. The choice of meat is important!!! Just because the supermarket has labeled the steak "good for grilling" doesn't mean that it is. Lean meat does not do well. You want a piece that has marbling throughout. And these are good cuts: fillet (mignon), top … Barbecue for You By Laura Kjer In may just be in human nature to barbecue. Well, we have been doing it as far back as time can denote. In the Stone Age, man hunted for food and cooked it over an open flame. And while we still cook over flame today, there are actually two different types. True barbecue requires a sauce. If not, you are just grilling. While both are good, barbecue involves slowly cooking the meat with low temperature for hours.When you think about going to a barbecue, you probably think of yummy, juicy food s… The World of Cornbread By Dennis R Weaver We're partial to cornbread. We like its rustic texture and chewy goodness. We like its versatility—it works for breakfast, lunch or dinner. It complements eggs in the morning, a hearty soup for lunch, or a dinner meal such as pork chops or chicken. Cornbread always reminds us of the South and some of the best is the result of wonderful Southern cooking.There's a wonderful world of cornbread to explore. The cornbreads that we have made the most are balanced with equal parts flour and cornm… How Not to Cook By Kenneth Hoffman It's not that I can't cook, it's just that I can't wait for it to get done. I've been spoiled all my life by good cooks. My mother, my wife and even the army cooks who fed me in style. So when I have to do it myself, it usually turns out to be a disaster.Last week, I put the water on to boil for coffee and went outside for just a minute to get a book from my car. When I got back, the kettle was red hot and smoking - I forgot to check to see if it contained water. To my brain, a high flame… Eating Cheap: A Week's Worth of Inexpensive Meals By Kathy Ferneau Short on cash? Are you a starving student? Or maybe you're saving up for that next tank of gas!Whatever the case, sometimes we all need to cut corners until the next paycheck rolls in.These meals will fill you up without emptying your wallet. They should feed four hungry mouths.While prices vary widely depending on your part of the country and your grocery store, you'll still find these dinners will stretch your food dollar to the max. Lentil stew. One package of lentils, a couple of carr… |
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