Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Temperature and the Art of Grilling Chicken

I am good at grilling chicken. That statement sounds simple, but for those of you who regularly grill food, you know what it means. It means that you have mastered the task of cooking chicken from raw to cooked over an open flame. It means that when the chicken hits the table it is cooked through, but still juicy. This is no small feat. The cards are stacked against you: the pieces are usually of different sizes and shapes, they sometimes start off at different temperatures, the fire in your grill may be uneven. This makes the job of getting each piece up the correct temperature, and not too far over, much more difficult. I liken it to hitting the bulls-eye; even an inexperienced griller can hit very near the bulls-eye occasionally, it is not impossible. The trick is consistency, can you hit the mark every time you take a shot?

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Homemade "Dijon" Mustard

Dijon style mustard is one of my favorites. My Dad used to make sandwiches with a peppered ham, tomatoes and cucumber slices. He would add a little "Jane's Crazy Mixed-up Salt" and some hot Dijon style mustard. Those were very good sandwiches, especially when the cukes and tomatoes came from our garden! I found a recipe in my new favorite reference book "Paul Kirk's Championship Barbeque Sauces" for a Dijon style mustard. As usual, I put my own spin on it and the mustard came out amazing! Here is what I did:

Friday, July 9, 2010

Naan Bread

My brother, Tad, showed me this recipe and it is easy and fun on the grill.

Check it out: Naan Bread

Friday, April 23, 2010

Matt's ABTs

ABTs, or Atomic Buffalo Turds have been around for awhile. They are especially popular with the owners of smokers because they can be cooked low and slow and get a nice smokey flavor added to them. That does not mean you can not do them on your Weber kettle grill or gas grill too, just remember to try to cook them slowly and make sure to account for the bacon fat that will render out of them.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Matt's Pad Thai

This is my take on Pad Thai. It is taken from Alton Brown's version with a change, I do not use the  tofu, my family prefers chicken. I have used the tofu, but you have to be very careful with the marinade that Alton uses, if you marinate the tofu too long, it comes out way too salty. I have modified this recipe to use dark meat chicken and for the marinade, I use low sodium soy sauce and water to cut down on the salt in the dish.