Jul 19 2008

When is the Fire Ready for Barbeque Cooking Action? (How to Choose Meat, and Cook Chicken, Fish Vegetables, Herbs Suggestions)

Barbeque Chicken

There are various bits of chicken that can be cooked over the fire varying from whole chickens to kebabs. The greatest danger with chicken is over-cooking, resulting in dry, stringy meat, or burning the outside while the meat is underdone closer to the bone. To avoid this, cook it fairly slowly over a moderate fire. Prepare a marinade for the chicken and baste it frequently while barbeque. A whole chicken cooks in roughly 45 minutes, chicken pieces in 20 minutes and kebabs in 10-15 minutes. When you suspect that the chicken is cooked, prod it with a fork or knife; if the juices that flow out are clear, your job is done. Continue Reading »

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Jul 19 2008

When is the Fire Ready for Barbeque Cooking Action? (How to Choose Meat, and cook Lamb, Pork, Steak) Delicious Meal

Published by dodo under Fridge, Kettle, Microwave

A wood fire should have no more flames, just red-hot coals. You need to know how hot your fire is as different meats need different heats (see below). The palm test has been handed down through the centuries and is still the best way to test a fire. Hold your hand the same distance above the coals as where the barbeque grid will be, roughly 10 centimeters above the coals. If you pull your hand away before you can count to three (as in one-thousand-and-one, one-thousand and-two, onethousand-and-three), you have hot coals. If you can keep it there for four to five seconds you have a moderate fire, and if you can count to six or seven you have a slow fire. Continue Reading »

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