Barbecues Smokers BBQ Recipes
Barbecues Smokers BBQ Recipes : I was a personal barbecue 'burning' enthusiast untill I tried a smoker. I
always burnt everything because when the food was ready the guests were socialising and too engrossed to come for
another 20 minutes. So then I tried a water smoker. Got the food cooking a couple of hours before
the guests came. Found that it's almost impossible to overcook, and discovered the admiration of our visitors when
I lifted the lid off, revealing tons of perfectly cooked, hot, delicious, moist food... Well... I was converted. I
now have been known to even do the Sunday chicken or roast in it. Sad I know but true.
If you've never tried smoked food before then you are missing a treat. Smoked food (and we're not talking about
kippers here, prepacked from the supermarket) really does have that extra special BBQ'd
flavour.
What's so different about smoking? I hear you ask. Well... Crudely put there are three types of
barbecuing - grilling, roasting and smoking. Grilling will do for steaks, chops, sausages, burgers
and kebabs etc ie food that is cooked close to direct heat; at high temperature; and quickly. Meat
juices droponto something hot (coals, flames, lava rock, ceramic brickets or sear plates) vapourize and caramelise
the food. Producing that recognisable BBQ flavour. Any heat in the air disappears past the food
and is gone.
Put a lid on it though, turn down the heat and you can start to cook by that trapped hot air and also by the
reflected heat bouncing off the lid. That's roasting. Just like mum doing the joint on a Sunday plus the benefits
of the meat juices still hitting something hot and vapourising. You can even use a rotisserie. Great for
whole joints of meat, chickens etc. Roasting obviously takes longer than a few minutes.
Throw on a couple of handfuls of flavoured wood or herbs and we are in a whole new world of flavours. Soaking
them in water first (for 1/2 to 2 hours) makes them burn slower and smoke longer. Wrapping them in aluminium foil a
couple of times and piercing a few holes has the same effect of slowing down the burn and increasing the smoke. The
more you can remove the food from the direct heat the better. The food gets roasted & smoked rather than
grilled. If you're using a hooded grill have the heat source or burner on at one end and the food at t'other.
If you then go and put the flavoured wood chips in a pan of water and simmer that lot, you start 'water
smoking'. You end up cooking in a succulent steam which never gets much above 90-110 degrees centigrade. The food
therefore, never has the moisture sucked out of it by the heat. In fact the meat sucks the smoky flavour right in
deep. This process does take much longer than straight grilling of course! I fill up my smoker with burgers,
chicken pieces, prawns etc and come back about 2-3 hours later. All the food is superbly cooked. Leave it another
hour and it still won't be overcooked.
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