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Outdoor Cooking '09
With summer quickly approaching, I thought it'd be nice to have an outdoor cooking thread. I've seen a few BBQ threads for years past, so here's a place to post recipes, pictures, and experiments with outdoor cooking -- grilling, camp cooking, bbqs, etc, in 2009.
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Kitsune's first experiment with our new dutch oven: a stew/soup made with chicken, onions, green peppers, tomatoes, cumin, and oregano. It turned out pretty well, and we're looking forward to making it again at camp in a few weeks.
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3588/...544f5877b8.jpg Ta daa! http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3663/...e6227603bd.jpg The whole set up on our apartment porch. http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3537/...a401a41132.jpg The cook. http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3603/...90035d3caf.jpg Our stew cooking away... http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3528/...4819a83217.jpg |
Oh, the joys of breaking many laws/fire codes! This was fun, although I'm sure the neighbors likely wondered what all the smoke was when I was getting the coals going.
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sah-WEET
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Cool
I see you followed rule #1 , Have a tasty Beverage Handy But you Broke Rule # 2 , fire/coals and bare feetz DONT Mix !!! |
An aircraft/auto-mechanic drip pan or an expanse of tiles would do a lot to fireproof your porch, too. Put your hot stuff in the middle.
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Tiles. I hunted for tiles to use for pizza stone. Never found any? WTF I think they said unfired tile???
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It was excellent. Served with cheese grits and asparagus spears. I have a slight overhang from all the whiskey it took to prepare it.
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I have a slight overhang from all the whiskey it took to prepare
See Kits Rule #1 |
Live trap + smoker = something delicious is cooking!
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I most always kill it first.
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Speaking of Salmon, I think the award goes to seakdivers.
It took me a while to find it, but here's the link http://cellar.org/showpost.php?p=316618&postcount=12 OK, now I'm hungry. |
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I got yer outdoor cookin right here.
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I highly recommending signing up for Allrecipes.com daily dish mailings.
I got this in today and I'm thinking of trying it. I usually grill directly and do not boil to precook, but this looked interesting. I'm going to follow the advice in one of the reviews and cut into the raw meat to let in more marinade. Allrecipes.com: Grilled Turkey Legs |
Don't forget the pics.
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I want some of that salmon!
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We done et it.
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bugger
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him too
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Anyone here done a whole pig roast over a fire pit before? Or cooking technique where you bury the food with hot coals?
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No, but I'm game to try.
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The smell was a little odd. It smelled like something or someone was burning more than something was cooking. |
Need some advice for the grilling aficionados. I am new to the whole charcoal grill thing, but just bought one because of the price. Tonight, I am making some things I could use tips on timing. I will have 2 chicken breasts cut into 1 in pieces on skewers, 4 thinner boneless pork chops (from the freezer stash before the grill) and some other pork chops that I am assuming are thick.
I was thinking of setting up the coals on one side of the grill, putting the thick pork chops over the heat and the thinner chops and kabobs over the indirect heat. Cooking the thick chops about 10 mins total and the thin chops and kabobs about 5 mins total. Any suggestions or "Oh my God you're doing it wrong!" greatly appreciated. Oh and I am going to be putting BBQ sauce on the big chops and 2 of the thinner chops. Maybe something else on the kebabs or maybe just seasoning. Thanks! |
Chops are usually done over high heat (over the coals). They should take ~15 min depending on the thickness. You should poke them with a knife to make sure they are done all the way through. Once you are more experienced you'll be able to judge without having to lose some of the juices.
I usually marinate my chops for an hour or two coated with prepared mustard and honey or mustard and brown sugar. I would do the chicken kebabs over the non-charcoal side of the grill. I've never done chicken as kebabs so I can't give you much on that. Put the BBQ sauce on towards the end ~10 minutes before taking off. The sugar in the BBQ sauce will burn if you put it on too early. I don't want to discourage you, but this is a fairly ambitious menu for your first grilling. |
Thanks for the tips dar. I know it is very ambitious. It is not actually my first grilling. I have experience with gas grills, but they are more easy to regulate than charcoal. My first grilling on charcoal was kielbasa *drool*.
This will be harder, but I think it is more the grilling times that will be the hardest. |
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Good to know, thanks. I think it is going to be in the upper 70's by the time I grill and not too much wind.
Stupid question though - when do you leave the lid on? |
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I generally leave the lid on unless I'm actually doing something on the grill. It keeps the flames down and makes the temperature more consistent. Some people don't like that for steaks as it reduces the charring. I compromise for steaks by leaving the lid off for the last five minutes or so. For the stuff you're doing I would leave the lid on unless you actually need to turn something etc. If you are going to put the lid on, all the vents should be wide open for grilling. BBQ is a different matter. |
Thanks! I will let you all know how it goes tomorrow. Maybe even get some pictures.
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My ex was Samoan, so we had quite a lot of Oumu's which is the traditional ground cooking technique for Samoan culture. You start with your bed of coals, and as they're burning down, you put a layer of river rocks over the top. Once all the flames are gone from your heat source, you can then place your food on the hot rocks. A whole pig is easy to do this way. You just sit it on the rocks. I recommend cleaning the rocks if they're dirty of course. you should then push the outter rocks in around, and then cover with banana leaves. Lots of them. If you don't have access to banana leaves, you can use dampened paper. Newspaper is fine if you don't mind the idea of the ink. You can also put your veges in with the pork that way too. All in all, a whole carcass will only take a couple of hours to cook this way, but there's a lot more time in preparation, so it probably works out the same either way the first time. Once you've already got your stash of rocks etc, it's a much quicker process in future. I like the Samoan style better than the Maori underground cooking where the food is covered with earth. The taste is much different. |
I never time anything, precisely. I always look at the food and determine. If it ain't bleeding and it's tender it's ready.
Best money I ever spent as far as grillin was the instant meat thermometer. Takes the guesswork out of it. 'Specially if you are a little tipsy. BTW... No grill works really good if you aren't having a drink or a cold one.:beer::guinness: |
I have a question for those of you who BBQ.
Is it more common to have your steaks and other red meat products well done or rare? The reason I ask is because of the suggested cooking times for grilling. I'd rarely do a steak for more than 2 minutes on either side then let it rest at the back of the grill for a few minutes so that it's still nice and pink in the middle. I understand with pork and chicken cooking longer, but if your grill is nice and hot, even those shouldn't take 15 minutes to cook through. |
Don't skimp on the charcoal; make sure to get in enough to cover the coal-holding gridiron of a Weber Smokey Joe type. If necessary to cool the thing a bit, you can either choke the bottom vent door down to half open or smaller, or remove some hot coals with tongs. Drop these into something fireproof like a flowerpot with an inch or two of sand or pebbles in the bottom.
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Whelp, it was a total bust - couldn't get the coals to light. No biggie, had it on the indoor grill. I will be trying again, though! I just need to see what type of meat is on sale.
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So sorry it didn't work out bro. Hope you weren't feeding guests?
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medium or medium rare. tonight i broiled a top round to 135 degrees in the middle and took it out, it went to 145 degrees before I sliced it.
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In honor of the swine flu, we had marinated porkchops on the grill tonight. :yum:
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With conventional charcoal briquettes, souse 'em almost until they drip with the starter fluid. They'll absorb a lot. Cap the can of starter and set it well back, and use either a long match or toss a match in from a couple feet away and upwind, being careful of any "whoof." Charcoal gives a powerful, even heat once it's burned down to a red bed (gray ash and heat shimmer in the daylight), but it takes a good bit of fire to get it going. Once going it runs steady, but always expect to need a lot of starter burn time and combustion encouragement. But make a point of not trying to squirt more starter onto coals already lit. That fluid burns easily, and you don't want fire traveling up the stream to the plastic bottle in your hand. If you really think you need to restart -- and it can happen -- put starter on a separate batch of coals in a separate container, and only then load these onto the failing fire. They should catch easily, but without pyrotechnics, just the usual starter bonfire. |
Enough main course. Time for dessert!
This recipe has been discussed before, only now have I made the video available. BTW, the still with the shirt was for the encore performance the second night. The video here is from opening night. |
That looks crazy and awesome! I want to try it.
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http://picasaweb.google.com/AnesMerc/PigRoast# |
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Huge shindigs like that make me really want a back yard. :thumbsup: |
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We had a 'pig pickin' a couple weekends ago. Dumbass me forgot my camera.
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Couple of beef roasts done slow in the smoker over night, about twenty hours. Yes, I love garlic.
Before and After. |
Looks strangely like whale penis. :unsure:
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Garlic studded for your oral pleasure.
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Man that looks tastey. I'm heading to the store to see what I can grill tonight.
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Queen - I had one guest, not a big deal. He understood. I just whipped out my trusty grill pan and all was cooked.
Urbane - I am trying to do it without the user of match light or lighter fluid. I keep reading that it leaves an aftertaste on lighter flavored meats like chicken which is what I primarily eat. No worries, I haven't given up yet. |
Charcoal isn't that flammable actually! They make a device for people like yourself, a chimney starter.
I never had much luck with mine, but it wasn't the Weber. I might get the Weber and try again. That page has a cool idea, start it with a sterno can instead of using newspapers. As we know, print is dead. |
Mine works great but it sometimes doesn't start enough at one filling. I need a huge one.
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The chimney I have says on the label to not use starter fluid for some reason. (?) |
Chimneys work great , but take some getting used to ,
tip 1 ) use just a Bit of cooking oil on the paper tip 2 ) Shield the bottom so the wind does NOT blow thru it , but so that air can Flow in as need be tip 3 ) DINNER AT Vs House !!!!!! |
Thanks for all the tips - I will keep you updated on my adventures. By the end of the summer - I'm cooking a butt :D
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