Cooking
For Fun
Tips
for Grilling

Grilling Tips for Barbecue Perfection:
To
keep your steaks tender, leave the meat in the vacuum pack and thaw the
cuts in cool water, or overnight in the fridge. Don't use the microwave
- you'll actually toughen and damage the steak before it reaches the grill.
For perfectly grilled steaks, it helps to have one side of the barbecue
hot and the other side on medium. This way you can sear the steaks on the
hot side and then move them to the slightly cooler side of the barbecue
to finish cooking nice and slowly, under more relaxed and forgiving conditions.
The secret is not to flip too often, except for burgers. The rule of thumb
is to flip only once during grilling to help seal in the juices. And be
sure to use tongs when handling meat because a fork will pierce the cut
and let the juices and flavor escape.
Brushing the grill lightly with cooking oil or salad oil should reduce
or eliminate the meat sticking on the surface.
Close that lid! Always try to barbecue with the lid of the barbecue closed.
That way, the temperature will remain consistent, the food will cook faster,
the barbecue will use less gas, and the flavor will be smokier.
For easy preparation and cleanup, wrap vegetables in aluminum foil and
top them with butter and seasoning. You could also add a few ice cubes
inside the packet; as the packet heats, the cubes melt and the vegetables
steam beautifully.
Clean your grill regularly. Not only does the grill need to be cleaned,
but also the inside lid and the body cavity. Use a wire brush on the grates
and a scraper on the solid parts of the equipment. Remove all coals and
any liquids, which either accumulated or were placed in the grill. This
keeps prior cooking from flavoring the new cookout.
Always be sure the bottom tray and grease catch pan is clean and free from
debris.
A Few Tricks
Choose a tender cut of meat
that cooks quickly.
Try to make it thinner,
so that it cooks faster--pounding boneless chicken breasts or butterflying
pork tenderloins.
Finally, look for a marinade
that doesn't require the long standing time so many recipes call for. Highly
acidic mixtures can ruin the texture of meats that soak in them for too
long but can deliver great flavor when the marinating time is just 10 to
20 minutes.
Intense spice rubs are another
great quick way to season food for the grill: smoothed out with a little
oil and then spread over the meat, they require no standing time at all.
Safety Tip
Lister Elsa send this easy
safety hint: When using an outdoor barbecue for meats such as lamb where
the fat can catch fire, we always keep a filled water pistol by the grill
to shoot out the flame. It works wonderfully and never kills the heat in
the coals.
If you have comments or suggestions, email
us at
devriesb@vianet.ca
Webpage designed and maintained
by Leilani
Devries
|