Skip to main content

Barbeque tips from a master

Words of wisdom that I can aspire to, but alas, not live up to, straight from Doug Fleener, motivational speaker and retail god:


1. Get rid of that gas grill.
I know, I know, you like the convenience. You like turning a knob and 10 minutes later you're ready to cook. Unfortunately, using a gas grill means sacrificing an incredible amount of flavor. If you do a taste comparison of something cooked on gas versus something cooked on charcoal, you will almost invariably prefer the food cooked over charcoal. Charcoal really is as easy to use as gas. The trick is to have a high quality chimney. Wad up some paper in the bottom, fill that baby up with charcoal, light it and walk away. Fifteen or twenty minutes later you're ready to dump the hot coals in your grill. Sure, it takes a bit more time but it doesn’t involve any more work.

2. Get rid of that starter fluid. The stuff is nasty, leaves a taste, and has a tendency to remove your eyebrows. The chimney is the only way to go.

3. Let your food come up to room temperature before grilling. One of the biggest mistakes people making is moving food directly from the refrigerator to the grill. Most meats should sit at room temperature for about 20 minutes before going onto the grill.

4. Use rubs to enhance your meats instead of heavy sauces. Rubs are a mixture of different spices, sugars, and salts to enhance the meat flavor. For most meats it is best to put the rub on the night before and refrigerate wrapped in plastic wrap. This works especially well on chicken and pork. Fine pieces of beef don't need them. If you like to grill with BBQ sauce, put it on at the very end and then serve some on the side. Most BBQ sauces have sugar in them and burn easily.

5. Chicken grilled under a brick is easy, tastes great, and will impress your friends and family. Take a whole chicken and cut out the backbone with either shears or a sharp knife. Flatten the chicken. Rub the chicken with vegetable oil and add a generous amount of salt and pepper. If you're comfortable working with indirect heat, fire your grill up to high. If you want to work with direct heat then your fire should be about medium. Oil the grates and put the chicken skin down. Take a sheet pan, oil the bottom and place on top of the chicken. Add three bricks to flatten it even more. Close the lid and grill for about 25 - 30 minutes. Check for flare-ups but do not move the chicken. After 25 minutes check the chicken for doneness. I usually flip the chicken and cook for about another 5 minutes. Take the chicken off the grill and let it rest for 5-10 minutes. Serve with a good BBQ sauce on the side. Believe me, no matter how committed you are to healthy eating, the crispy chicken skin is hard to resist.

So fire up the grill, mix up some homemade lemonade, set the table outdoors, then sit back and enjoy the rewards of your hard work. You deserve it.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Loyalty Review: Kohl's Yes2You

 As some of you know, I've spent over 15 years in the customer loyalty space. So, when I come across a new retail loyalty program, I can't help but see the pluses and minuses. After this many years, it's kind of ingrained. Periodically, I'll share my thoughts with you. Today, it's Kohl's turn under the scope. Let's have a look, shall we? I've divided the review up into three sections: what's good about the program, what's bad about the program, and what I'd change about it. That last one has some actual value: I charged hundreds of dollars per hour for loyalty program consulting, and had over a dozen clients, before I moved to JustAnswer FT. But, being a pandemic and all, I'm giving it away for free here. Kohl's, you're welcome. Here we go! The Good Sign up is opt in Seems odd to praise Kohl's for this, but in department store loyalty, this is a rarity, and a smart one. It means the customers who are opted in are already prime...

Revisiting Star Trek: The Next Generation: Season 1

I recently started rewatching Star Trek: The Next Generation from the beginning. I have nothing but fond memories of the original run in the 1980s, given how excited I was for a new Trek series in my lifetime (I had only reruns and the movies to stoke my Trek interest), and it recently occurred to me that, while I diligently consumed every TNG episode, I had not experienced the series since it's original run.  Why did I do this? Well, a few reasons: With the triumphant return of Sir Patrick Stewart to the smaller screen as the venerable Jean Luc Picard , I thought it would be interesting to contrast this version with the previous, and see how far he has come. It would add color to the character, as well as Sir Patrick. Frankly, with the COVID19 lockdown, the series I have binged upon have been intense, dark, and disturbing. Combined with the activity of the world, including insane politics, homicidal police who seem to view people of color as "prey," rather than their ch...

The Icarus Effect

This morning's news started with the latest grim proof of overdevelopment in a tough sector: SkyBus Airlines shut down , less than year from when it started. Never heard of Skybus? Not surprising; they chose to focus on trips from Ohio to the West Coast for ridiculously low fares. Yes, you read that right: the airlines' unique niche was that they focused on trips from Ohio . Was air travel such an amazingly profitable business that we needed that much segmentation and focus? Of course not. A year ago, when Skybus was just getting off the ground (har har), fuel costs were at an all time high. United was still in bankruptcy; Delta, a fellow airline with a major hub in Ohio, was just exiting Chapter 11. And yet, "irrational exuberance" led investors like Nationwide Mutual Capital, Huntington Capital Investment Co., and Battelle Services Co. to ignore the obvious signs of risk, and dive into what was a dubious investment. Today, they, and the passengers who were lured by ...