Put ice in your hamburger? 27 great grilling tips
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Grilling season is well underway, and weβve got you covered. Before you break out the grill for the Fourth of July, check out these tips from the Chicago Tribune.
Intro
Updated
Grilling season is finally here and weβve got you covered. Before you dust off the grill, check out these tips from the Chicago Tribune.
Michael Tercha1. Use a gentle hand
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Take care not to overmix burger meat or the burgers may come out tough. Make sure the mix-ins (seasonings, diced veggies, etc.) are thoroughly combined in a bowl, then add the ground meat and gently massage until just combined.
Elena Elisseeva/Dreamstime2. Put ice in your burger
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If making a burger with lean meat, form the patty around an ice cube, chef and author Elizabeth Karmel suggests in her grilling book βTaming the Flame." The moisture adds juiciness to compensate for the lack of fat.
John Dziekan3. Use high heat for kabobs
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Using high, even heat to grill kebabs is the No. 1 tip from Mr. D's Shish-Kabobs owner Mike Antonopolous, who has been manning the chargrill at the Chicago shop since 1973.
BOB FILA4. Trust your gut
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It's important to do your research, but according to executive chef Andrew Brochu of Chicagoβs Roister Restaurant, don't be timid when it comes to using your newfound knowledge. "Trust in the fact that you know how to cook," says Brochu. "Use your intuition, and keep your confidence." Burgers look done? They probably are.
Dreamstime5. Make chimichurri
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Greg Denton and Gabrielle Quinonez Denton of Ox Restaurant in Portland, Ore., top grilled meats with chimichurri. A recipe from their book, βAround the Fire": Combine 1/2 cup minced yellow onion, 1/2 cup chopped flat-leaf parsley, 1 tablespoon chopped oregano, 1 teaspoon finely grated garlic, 1 1/2 teaspoons salt, 1 teaspoon black pepper, 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes. Add 1 cup extra-virgin olive oil and 1/2 cup red wine vinegar; mix well.
Michael Tercha6. Master the fire
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Learn the difference between direct and indirect heat (cooking right over the flames vs. not) and when to use each, writes Jamie Purviance in his book, βWeberβs New American Barbecue." Cheat sheet: Quick-cooking items, like skewers, do better over direct heat, while foods that take more than 45 minutes, like a whole duck or turkey, stay juicier with indirect heat.
BOB FILA8. Slicing made easy
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Bryan Mayer, director of butchery education at Fleishers in Brooklyn, likes his burgers thin. "To form the perfect patty, I use two takeout container lids and press the meat between," he says. Note: We also use takeout lids to steady grape tomatoes for slicing. Magic!
RUSS CARMACK9. Butter your meat
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Danny Grant, executive chef at Maple & Ash in Chicago, serves his grilled steaks with what he calls "beef butter," which is a combination of butter, beef jus, garlic, thyme and reduced red wine. But even a combination of butter and fresh herbs would work.
BOB FILA10. The perfect patty
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For burgers, buy beef with a 70-30 lean-to-fat ratio, keep patties cold and salt right before you cook. "Just salt. It's not meatloaf," says Bryan Mayer, director of butchery education at Fleishers in Brooklyn.
Paul Brady/Dreamstime11. Use a spice rub
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Marinades need hours of resting with the meat, and even then they penetrate only a few millimeters in. Spice rubs provide stronger flavor, and you can put them on at the last-minute, write Chris Schlesinger and John Willoughby in their book, "The Big-Flavor Grill."
Glenn Koenig12. Grill on a flat surface
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TV host Rachael Ray shares her best burger tip: Grill the patty on a cast-iron surface, not directly on the grates. "I truly believe a flat surface is tastier. You get that even cooking," she says.
Dreamstime13. Put down the beer, pick up a cocktail
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Prefer liquor to beer or wine? Cocktails made with brown spirits β bourbon, brandy, rum β are the best with grilled red meat, advise Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page in their book, βWhat to Drink with What You Eat.β
Bill Hogan14. Itβs OK to burn some foods
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Blackening the outside of some fresh chilies, like poblanos or red bell peppers, is the best way to get rid of the tough-to-peel "skin." According to food scientist Harold McGee, chilies are coated with a flammable wax that can be "burned to a crisp before the flesh gets soft."
Chris Walker15. Grilling corn? Make elotes
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After grilling, pull back the husk and coat the kernels with mayo. Sprinkle with chili powder and crumbled cotija cheese, and finish with a squirt of lime and a squeeze of Parkay.
Michael Tercha16. Choose your words carefully
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Sure, βbarbecueβ is often used synonymously with βgrillβ but, really, they arenβt the same. βGrilling is hot and fast; barbecue is slow and low,β explain Ardie A. Davis and Paul Kirk in the book βAmericaβs Best BBQ.β
JAMES F. QUINN17. Add vinegar to your marinade
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Add a bit of vinegar to your marinade; in small doses, the acid helps break down muscle fibers so the meat can more efficiently absorb the liquid, says Michael Trotta, head butcher at Chop Shop in Chicago. Try a ratio of a typical vinaigrette β about 1/4 cup vinegar to 3/4 cup oil.
Bill Hogan18. Butter your buns before grilling
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βPlease do not toast a dry bun on a dry grill; it only produces dry toast,β says Jeff Mauro of Pork & Mindyβs in Chicago. Instead, spread room-temperature butter crust-to-crust, and toast the bun butter side down on the grill until lightly golden.
Anton Eine/Dreamstime19. Think beyond meat and veggies
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Introduce some new foods to your cookout. βThe Flavor Bibleβ by Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg names the following as perfect for the grill: artichokes, eggplant, endive, fennel, garlic, lobster, pineapple, salmon, swordfish, tomatoes and zucchini.
Michael Tercha20. Melt cheese with just-grilled pears
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A wedge of brie between planks of caramelized pear makes for a devastating dessert. Slice pears the long way into 1/3-inch-wide planks, use a paring knife to punch out seeds, brush on caramel sauce and grill for about 8 minutes, flipping several times.
Michael Tercha21. A little wood goes a long way
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Celebrity chef Rick Bayless says, βEven a few thick sticks tossed atop your charcoal embers will inflect your food with mouthwatering wood-grilled flavor.β
Tamara Lee Harding/Dreamstime22. Invest in a chimney
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Lighter fluid can impart a chemical taste to grilled foods, so itβs worth buying a charcoal chimney to get the flames roaring sans fluid. Stuff the bottom with paper, pile in coals and light the paper on fire; the flames will funnel upward to ignite the coals.
Kirk McKoy23. βSealing in the juicesβ is a myth
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Most recipes say to sear a thick cut to "seal in the juices," then move it to the cooler part of the grill to finish. Do the opposite, says "The Food Lab" author J. Kenji Lopez-Alt. A steak that's already warm from the grill will sear much faster so you don't overcook the outer layer.
Eric Paul Zamora24. Prep your grill with salt and water
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25. Raw meat doesnβt need to rest
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Myth: Meat needs to come to room temperature, so it will cook faster and more evenly. Reality: "Cooking meat cooks meat faster β not waiting hours for it to come to temperature," says Meathead Goldwyn, author of "Meathead: The Science of Great Barbecue and Grilling."
Ricardo DeAratanha26. Asparagus!
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Asparagus is great on the grill. Toss the spears in a little olive oil, sprinkle with sea salt and lay them perpendicular to the grates (duh). It takes only two to three minutes, and you really donβt have to flip them.
E. Jason Wambsgans27. Whole fish donβt need direct heat
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Most seafood cooks nicely when positioned directly over the heat source. Large whole fish or fish fillets weighing more than 3 pounds do better with more moderate heat, so use the indirect method (not over the heat).
Michael Tercha28. Patience pays off
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When cooking with charcoal, wait for the coals to settle down. Can you see flames? Then the coals are still too hot.
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