Wednesday 28 December 2011

Cuisinart CGG-200 All-Foods Gas Grill

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Tuesday 22 November 2011

The Smell of a Barbecue in the Air!

!±8± The Smell of a Barbecue in the Air!

Summer is here! There's nothing like the smell of a barbecue in the air to let us know Summer has finally arrived. The telltale aroma of food being grilled outdoors to make your mouth water!

Barbecues come in all different shapes and sizes, charcoal or gas fueled, the choice is yours! What is important is that you get that gorgeous, grilled to perfection food! Sometimes this can be tricky to achieve without the right barbecue accessories and tools.

Barbecue toolkits are a great way to get some essentials accessories for starting out or upgrading your current tools. They also make a lovely gift for the barbecue griller in your life! Toolkits can include spatulas, tongs, forks, skewers, knives and basting brushes. Tools are often stainless steel or stainless steel with wooden handles.

Kebab Skewers and Racks are a must have for grilling a perfect kebab, whether it be a meat, vegetable or fruit kebab this is a must have tool for the cook! Other accessories include Rotisseries to grill food to perfection! The rotation cooks the meat evenly in its own juices and allows easy access for continuous basting if desired.

Ever been to a barbecue where the sausages have fallen down the grill and onto the charcoal? The multi-grill is great for smaller foods and prevents any items going astray! Easy to use and makes turning burgers over straightforward, just flip the whole tool for evenly grilled food.

Keeping the cook safe and stylish is a must so an apron and barbecue mitts are essential.

When all the grilling has been done and food eaten, to keep it at its best the barbecue should be cleaned and taken care of, grill cleaning brushes and rubber brushes make this process quicker and easier. Until your next barbecue it is a good idea to invest in a barbecue cover to keep your barbecue it top condition as you never know what the weather and elements will through our way in this country!

Happy barbecuing!


The Smell of a Barbecue in the Air!

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Friday 18 November 2011

Cuisinart CGG-180T Petit Gourmet Portable Tabletop Gas Grill

!±8± Cuisinart CGG-180T Petit Gourmet Portable Tabletop Gas Grill

Brand : Cuisinart | Rate : | Price : $110.00
Post Date : Nov 18, 2011 20:43:07 | Usually ships in 24 hours

Get great grilled flavor every day from this compact, high-performance grill. It's small format can be put almost anywhere for ultimate convenience. And although the grill is compact, its ample cooking grate is large enough to cook most family meals - 8 steaks, 8 hamburgers, 6 - 10 chicken breasts, or over 4-Pound of fish. The grill heats up very quickly, and uses far less gas than a full-sized grill. Best of all, with its great portability features this grill can cook your meals wherever you go - the beach, the game, the campsite - anywhere. Folding legs, grill lid latch, generous carry handle, and the spill resistant drip tray all enhance portability.

  • Portable gas grill with 145-square-inch grilling area and foldaway legs
  • Cooks 8 burgers, 8 steaks, 6 to 10 chicken breasts, or 4 pounds of fish at once
  • Powerful 5,500 BTU stainless-steel burner and even-heating porcelain-enameled grate
  • Aluminum legs and stabilizing feet set up in seconds; integrated lid lock keeps lid secure
  • Pronounced briefcase-style carrying handle; weighs 13 pounds

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Sunday 6 November 2011

Some Meat Smoking and Grilling Tips

!±8± Some Meat Smoking and Grilling Tips

Smoking meat is all about cooking the meat low and slow unlike grilling where grill fare are seared at searing temperatures. If you are truly serious about barbecue and smokey meats, then you need to learn a bit about it. Smoking meat is part skill, part experience, and part equipment. If someone is new to meat smoking, asking peers about basic things one needs to learn will really help. Most burgeoning pit masters won't share secrets about their recipes, but they will share the basics of what to do. One can look on the Internet for recipes and some of that great taste. The longer someone is an active meat smoker, gaining experience and contact with other smokers, the more opportunities for learning new techniques and secret recipes will arise.

The indirect method of smoking allows you to use an ordinary grill as a smoker and believe it or not, you can turn out some interesting fare this way. Smoking meat is a great way to break down tough cuts of meat, such as ribs, brisket and pork shoulder. Smoking meat is cooking it between 190f and 225f while in the meat smoker. Cold smoking meat is primarily for cured meat like ham, bacon etc. And is done inside the meat smoker at temperatures below 80f. Cold smoking always takes longer than hot smoking. You can short smoke meat like steaks and chops on the barbecue grill with gas grills smokers or long smoke meat inside gas grills smokers. Whether you smoke your meat inside a portable grill or meat smoker, any way that you decide to push smoke into the meat is a great way to enjoy it.

Smoking meat calls for acquiring the proper internal temperature. Because outdoor temperatures will dictate cooking time, you cannot rely on time alone. There are many recipes available but they cannot be applied across the board. Meat smoking is also a growing trend for great flavor by adding taste to food without adding extra fat. When the smoke covers mild meats like pork, fish and poultry, it produces a mouth-watering flavor and rich color that's hard to resist. Smoking is easy to do and can be accomplished in a kettle-style grill using indirect heat and adding wood chips to banked coals. At least two hours before you plan to start cooking, place wood chips or wood chunks in water to soak. Estimate two chunks of wood or a good handful of wood chips for each hour of planned smoking time. If you have unburned soaked wood after completing smoking, it can be dried and used at another time. Build the fire about 40 minutes before you plan to start cooking. Remove the cooking grate from the covered grill and build a mound of about 25-30 charcoal briquettes on one side of the fire grate, light them, and let them burn down to glowing embers, covered with gray ash. Leave only one of the bottom air vents open directly under the charcoal. Place an aluminum loaf pan filled two-thirds with water across from the charcoal.

Smoking meat is mainly used to soften and add flavor to the meat. It can also be a low heat and slow method that works superbly for fatty or tough meat like beef brisket, beef ribs, pork spareribs, or lamb shoulder. For that signature smoky flavor, you need wood chips. Apple, maple, mesquite, and hickory are the best wood chips to use. There are some considerations when smoking meat on your own. To prevent food poisoning, observe cleanliness when working with raw meat. Wash surfaces and your hands often, separate meats in different stages of preparation, and cook & chill using proper temperatures. Defrosting the meat properly is an important step in the process. Defrosting in the smoker can cause bacteria to breed within the meat. Remember, smoking takes longer. Regular grill cooking happens much faster and the bacteria would not have time to grow, but with smoking it is a real possibility.

Smoking meat is by far the exceptional means of achieving that desired flavor but it also requires the most effort. With the benefits of our up to date barbecuing tools the identical results can be realized without all of the extra work involved. The quickest way to add the smoke flavor to any meat is by using liquid smoke. This can be added to any food from baked beans to grilled fish. There are several pitfalls to this item as it does not impart a true smoke flavor to your recipe nor should the liquid be employed on an ongoing daily basis. We recommend this product only to create more interesting homemade sauces. You can use your backyard gas grills smoker to smoke meats. Several manufacturers of grills now include a smoke trough where you can insert a mixture of wood chips, pellets or chunks of hardwood for use as smoking material. The hoods on these grills generally call for closure when meat smoking is indicated. If you have an older grill which lacks the trough don't worry, as you can purchase a smoke box at your local department store, or you can assemble your own out of aluminum foil pockets to hold the wood pieces. The only problem with using gas grills smokers for smoking is that the grill tends to cook the meat rather quickly. Please remember that the art of correctly smoking meat is to cook the meat slowly over a longer period of time at lower temperatures. Making use of the typical backyard grill setup for smoking the meat can result in the food being done much too rapidly while failing to impart the desired subtle wood characteristics. This is why you need low temperatures and the correct equipment. Fortunately such equipment is available today for minimal cost.

Smoking meat is great for providing a cozy and friendly atmosphere for guests, perhaps inside a nice gazebo or around a picnic table. Most of us enjoy the simple joy of staying outdoors and eating delicious grilled meat but it often doesn't cross our minds that what appears to be healthy grilling can turn out to be less than healthy. Heterocyclic amines and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons may sound like complex words to most of us, but if we look carefully into their meanings we may look at grilling in a whole different way. Heterocyclic amines are cancer causing compounds that appear linked with the grilling of meat from muscle fibers and they have been shown to possibly cause cancer in animals and perhaps even in people.

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, for example, are cancer causing compounds produced by fats leaking onto the hot coals or grill burner surfaces and then being released through the smoke. The smoke produced releases these compounds which in turn coat the meat. There is a silver lining though! The above cancer causing compounds do not necessarily mean that you should ban grilling from your summer time gatherings. There are some steps you can take to reduce the amount of these substances from coating your meats. Marinate your meats before grilling and grill a lot of vegetables along with the meat to avoid filling up on meat alone. Also, do not overcook or char your meat. The more charring, the more cancer causing compounds will be formed and found on your smokey treat. Cook your meat slower and at lower temperatures, and grill every other night because in moderation, grilling and meat smoking can be thoroughly enjoyed.

I hope that this has served as an easy to read and understand introduction to this very rewarding extenstion to an already popular pastime. Turn your gas grills into smokers, or any grill into a smoker. More and more products and gas grills accessories are coming onto the market to serve this wonderful outgrowth of the whole backyard grilling passtime. Today's gas grills are built to last, so you already have the leg up by being able to get some of the best equipment to be in the market, ever.


Some Meat Smoking and Grilling Tips

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Thursday 13 October 2011

The Weber Portable Gas Grill Q 100 - A First-Hand Review

!±8± The Weber Portable Gas Grill Q 100 - A First-Hand Review

After having moved from a house with a backyard to an apartment building, I had to find a grill I could use in my new living space. So, I started my research for an alternative to my charcoal grill. I found online some great reviews for the Weber Q 100 Portable Gas Grill and decided to give it a try.

I had my doubts whether my food was going to be as tasty as the one grilled on charcoal but, as it turned out to be, my concerns were out of place.

First of all it's very well made and sturdy. The grill has a heavy cast iron grate unlike some cheaper grills you can find on the market, that have thin grates. The grill surface is not that big but it's enough for a family of four.

The grill heats up wonderfully and the heat is even. Every food we have made on the grill tasted great and you get a nice sear after some 6-8 minutes of preheat. The food gets done quite quickly so get a stop watch to monitor the grilling time.

I was a little concerned about the gas tanks that this grill operates on (I never used one in my life) but it's really a no-brainer. I hooked my grill up to a 5 lb propane tank (and it lasted for quite a while), but I have read that some people use larger gas tanks with an adapter hose.

The grill is so much easier to operate than a charcoal grill. It ignites at the push of a button and has a regulator to control the heat.

Since I hate cleaning my grill, I found it to be very helpful (and later read the same thing from other grill users) using the aluminum foil on the inside of the grill. So I clean the grill in no time. Furthermore you can use a foil tray for the drip pan as well.

I use another trick that saves me some cleanup: I brush the grill or the meat with oil so the food doesn't stick so much. I found the book you get with the grill to be most helpful. It had some great instructions and tips, especially the grilling time charts. Since I'm using this grill so much I bought the folding cart for this model too. It's such a great accessory to the grill. I recommend you get a grill brush as well.

I have to say I'm absolutely enthusiastic about this grill. It's really worth every penny I paid (the price is not that high though). I forgot my old charcoal grill one of the reasons being the fact that the Weber Q 100 is so much easier to use. You can prepare your food in no time and, what's important to me, you don't have to have a backyard at your disposal. Of course if you are planning a barbecue party then you should get a larger one. The Q 100 is ideal for a family of four (like mine) or if you're single, and if you don't have a couple of hours to grill. Most of the times, when I get from work, I just light my grill and have a great meal in 20 minutes.


The Weber Portable Gas Grill Q 100 - A First-Hand Review

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Wednesday 5 October 2011

Wednesday 28 September 2011

Weber 396002 Q 200 Portable Gas Grill

!±8± Weber 396002 Q 200 Portable Gas Grill

Brand : Weber | Rate : | Price : $159.99
Post Date : Sep 28, 2011 17:45:44 | Usually ships in 4-5 business days


The Weber Q 200 gas grill has a push-button ignition for easy, reliable lighting, an infinitely adjustable burner valve with a high-quality regulator, 2 durable Tuck-Away work tables with built-in tool holders (tools sold separately) which conveniently fold and store inside the grill, sturdy glass-reinforced nylon grill frame, cast aluminum lid and body, removable catch pan, a large weather-resistant lid handle, a porcelain-enameled cast-iron cooking grate, and operates on a standard 14.1 or 16.4 ounce propane cylinders (sold separately). Includes Weber Q recipe booklet. Tubular stainless steel burner, 12,000 BTU-per-hour, 280 sq. in. total cooking area. Limited 5-year warranty.

More Specification..!!

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