Barbecue Food Preparation
Good preparation techniques will set
you on the road to a great barbeque.
Meat, fish, vegetables and other aspects of the meal all
require special handling.
The optimal barbecue, like any meal, always uses fresh
ingredients.
Frozen meat can be thawed (in the refrigerator, never by
being left out on the counter), but it never fully returns to
its original state.
For the best taste, buy the meat as shortly before you
barbeque as possible. Fresh vegetables, and especially any
fish that's part of your recipe.
Develop your own unique barbecue rubs. The blend of spices
that enhance your meal is one aspect that makes your barbeque
unlike that of anyone else.
Hundreds of recipes are available online, but experiment to
find the one that suits you best. Then prepare the rub before
you even take the meat out of the refrigerator.
If you plan to use a barbecue sauce on the meat before or
during cooking, prepare it in advance as well. For those you
slather on at the end, wait until the meat is near ready if you
can. For smokers that take a half a day to finish, that's easy.
For a grill that only lasts ten minutes, there's no reason to
wait.
Clean your work area before you take the meat out of cold
storage.
Give yourself plenty of room to work on a thoroughly cleaned
and sanitized area. Any cutting boards, counters and so forth
should not only be cleaned well, but disinfected too. That wet
sponge or cloth you just used to wipe off the counter has
enough bacteria in it to turn any meal into a regrettable
episode.
Meat is especially prone to bacterial infection, so wipe the
counter with a dilute bleach solution, then thoroughly rinse
with purified water before laying anything out.
A good cut of beef will have some marbling throughout and on
the exterior. 'Marbling' is the pattern of veins of fat that
thread through the meat, but it also sometimes refers to the
layer of fat on the outside. But keep it to the right thickness
in order to add flavor but not overwhelm. A 1/4 inch around the
edge is plenty for pork or beef. Slice off any excess.
Some backyard chefs like to prepare hamburger patties,
chicken parts and other components outside near the grill. Bad
idea. Invasive insects, absorption of volatile organic
molecules given off by nearby trees, and other problems are
much more likely outside than in. Stick to the kitchen for
preparation where you have a clean, protected environment in
which to work.
Some thicker cuts will benefit from a bit of forking.
Stabbing the slice will open up holes that allow spices, sauce,
melting fat and other compounds to enter the interior more
easily. But don't overdo it. Too much exposure of the interior
leads to excessive drying during cooking. Sealing in the juices
is a natural and needed process for a good barbeque.
For anything more than a quick burger or hot dog, planning
your barbeque is essential to achieve great results.
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