RV Tips
Barbecue Tips For Better Taste by
Daniel Roshard
We all know that for some reason there are a lot
of people that volunteer to be responsible for the grilling and barbecue at
every event that has this option, and many times the barbecue is destroyed for a
wide variety of reasons, the fire was too strong, the wind increased the fire,
the meat was not right etc.
To know how to grill successfully is not about
being an expert at all kind of meat grilling and fire building, it is simply
keeping some very basic rules to the way you use the grill and some advice
regarding the fire. Control of the fire is a basic rule you must keep if you
want a better chance of eating a nicely grilled meat, and if fact it is the most
difficult to keep, you need to be slow and conscience of what you are doing.
Most people discover that grilling takes much
longer than they thought it would, this brings a lot of problems to the barbecue
table, the person in charge of the barbecue gets hungry, people come to visit
the grill and offer a lot of advice and tips and some people just visit to see
how it is doing, because they start getting hungry. The best thing to do is know
your plan, find out the time that the meat is expected to be ready, and start
the fire 20 minutes ahead of time since increasing the fire is not a problem,
but decreasing it might be a very big problem.
Have a little something to eat before you start,
or throughout the cooking to keep you focused on the quality and not the time it
take to cook, take the meat out from anything that keeps it cool about 30
minutes before you will load it on the grill, this will help the meat to cook
ideally.
In most cases you would want the barbecue not to
have any fire but only heat and at that point you need to decide if its warm
enough, or needs more heat. To increase the heat you can simply blow into the
fire or use something you can wave to make it grow, if you want to decrease the
fire you can use a small amount of water to kill some extra warm places and
reduce the heat, do not use a lot of water because if you do you run a very good
chance of killing the fire altogether. If you are unsure about the heat you can
place a small piece of meat and wait 10 minutes to see the effect.
Take the fat off the meat before you cook it, the
fat can increase the fire when it starts to drip into the barbecue, and in some
cases, if the fire is too strong it can result in the meat actually catching
fire which is a catastrophe for the person who is about to eat that piece of
meat. In any case, when cooking some kind of meat you never had cooked before
you should always test the fire before you introduce all the meat to the grill,
so start the grill ahead of time, test the meat for about 15 minutes and see if
it's the right heat for it.
About the Author
Daniel Roshard is an interior designer fascinated
by outdoor architecture, he is currently studying public parks and outdoor
design. Daniel is writing articles about home improvement and landscaping
issues. You can read his latest work on
Barbecue here.