Posts Tagged ‘grilling’

BBQ Chicken Recipe – How to Cook Barbeque Chicken

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

BBQ Chicken Recipe – How to Cook Barbeque Chicken

Easy BBQ chicken recipe that is perfect on your BBQ grill.  Looking to cook barbecue chicken?  This is your recipe!

BBQ Chicken Recipe - How to Cook Barbecue Chicken using BBQ Sauce and Dry Rub

Ingredients:
4 chicken halves
4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
8 tablespoons Pork Barrel BBQ All American Spice Rub
1 bottle Pork Barrel BBQ Original or Sweet BBQ Sauce, for serving
3 chunks of hickory
2 chunks of oak

BBQ Chicken Recipe:
Place the chicken on a cookie sheet and pat the meat dry with a paper towel. Rub 1 tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil onto each chicken half covering the entire surface area of the meat. Rub 2 tablespoons of Pork Barrel BBQ All American Spice Rub onto each chicken half, covering the entire surface area of the meat. Cover the chicken with aluminum foil and let it sit at room temperature for 30 minutes.

While the chicken is sitting get the charcoal grill ready. We recommend using 100% hardwood charcoal, in lump or briquette form, and we strongly encourage you to use a charcoal chimney to light the charcoal (stay away from lighter fluid if at all possible). The charcoal is ready to use when it has burned to a white ash. Place the coals on one side of the grill leaving an area of the grill open to cook the chicken over indirect heat with no coals underneath the meat.

After getting the coals arranged place the lid on the grill and let the grill reach a temperature of 325 degrees. Once the grill has reached 325 degrees you are ready to place the chicken in the grill. This is also the time you will want to add the hickory and oak chunks onto the coals.

Keep an eye on the grill and make sure it maintains a temperature around 325 degrees. If you like your chicken with a littlePork Barrel BBQ Sauce, coat the chicken with Pork Barrel BBQ Original or Sweet Sauce with about 3 minutes remaining, and flip once to ensure barbeque sauce coats both sides. When the chicken reaches an internal temperature of 165 degrees (this will occur about 45 minutes to an hour into the cooking process) remove the chicken from the grill and let it rest for 10 minutes.

Serve with Pork Barrel BBQ Original and Sweet BBQ Sauce on the side.

BBQ 101 – Grades of Beef

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

With all the great beef choices on the market today at local butchers like our friends at Wagshal’s and Let’s Meat on the Avenue it can leave a shopper scratching their head wondering what all the labels mean.  Here we’ll try to help you understand the difference between Dry Aged Beef and Certified Angus, and Prime and Grass-Fed.

Dry Aged – Dry aged beef is going to cost you some extra bucks, but you’ll be reward with great flavor at the dinner table.  Aging beef is the process which allows the meats natural enzymes to tenderize the meats tissue and give it a full flavor.

Certified Angus – This is a brand created by the American Angus Association.  It does not speak to a breed of cattle.

USDA Organic- Cuts of beef with the USDA Organic label on them can’t have been injected with synthetic hormones or antibiotics.  They must also be raised on organically grown feed (not necessarily grass though).

100% Grass-Fed- These cattle must have be raised on grass alone (but this doesn’t mean it is certified USDA Organic – although it is more likely than not that these cattle haven’t been given any synthetic hormones or antibiotics).  Grass-fed beef tends to be leaner and lower in calories than grain feed beef.

USDA Prime- Prime cuts of beef are the superior grade and have the highest degree of fat marbling (Marbling is the streaks of fat found within the muscle that make for a more flavorful and tender cut of meat.) and is generally cut from younger cattle.

USDA Choice – Choice cuts are the second highest grade of beef and have less fat marbling than Prime.  That isn’t to say these aren’t quality cuts of beef, but the will be less flavorful and tender than the Prime cuts.

USDA Select – Select cuts are the lowest grade of beef that you will find at your butcher shop.  Select cuts are tougher and less flavorful than the Prime and Choice cuts because they have very little fat marbling.

Don’t forget to sprinkle some Pork Barrel BBQ All American Spice Rub on your next meal – it makes all cuts of beef taste even better!!!!

BBQ 101 – 10 Important Facts about Grilling – Chef Paul Kirk

Monday, March 15th, 2010

In a recent issue of the KCBS Bullsheet Chef Paul Kirk contributed a great article titled “10 Important Facts about Grilling The 10 Important Facts for B.B.Q.” We thought we’d share that article with you.

10 Important Facts about Grilling
The 10 Important Facts for B.B.Q.

By Chef Paul Kirk

1. BE ORGANIZED. Have everything you need for grilling on hand and at grill side before you start grilling.

2. GAUGE YOUR FUEL. There’s nothing worse than running out of charcoal or gas in the middle of grilling. When using charcoal, light enough to form a bed of glowing coals 3 inches larger on all sides than the surface area of the food you’re planning to cook. (A 22 1/2 inch grill needs one chimney’s worth of coals). When cooking on a gas grill, make sure the tank is at least one-third full.

3. PREHEAT THE GRILL TO THE RIGHT TEMPERATURE. Rember: Grilling is a high-heat cooking method. In order to achieve the seared crust, charcoal flavor, and handsome grill marks associated with masterpiece grill man ship, you must cook over a high heat. How high? At least 500 degrees F. Although it is worth repeating: When using charcoal, let it burn until it is covered with a thin coat of gray ash. Hold your hand about 6 inches above the grate. After 3 seconds, the force of the heat should force you to snatch your hand away. When using a gas grill, preheat to high (at least 500 degrees F); this takes 10 to 15 minutes. When indirect grilling, preheat the grill to 350 degrees.

4. KEEP IT CLEAN. There’s nothing less appetizing than grilling on dirty old burnt bits of food stuck to the grate. Besides, the food will stick to a dirty grate. Clean the grate twice: once after you’ve preheated the grill and again when you’ve finished cooking. The first cleaning will remove any bits of food you may have missed after your last grilling session. Use the edge of a metal spatula to scrape off large bits of food, a stiff wire brush to finish scrubbing the grate.

5. KEEP IT LUBRICATED. Oil the grate just before placing the food on top, if necessary (some foods don’t require that the grates be oiled). Spray it with oil (away from the flames), use a folded paper towel soaked in oil, or rub it with a piece of fatty bacon, beef fat, or chicken skin.

6. TURN, DON’T STAB. The proper way to turn meat on a grill is with tongs or a spatula. Never stab the meat with a carving fork – unless you want to drain the flavor-rich juices ont0 the coals.

7. KNOW WHEN TO BASTE. Oil-and-vinegar-, citrus-, and yogurt- based bastes and marinades can be brushed on the meat throughout the cooking time. (If you baste with a marinade that you used for raw meat or seafood, do not apply it without first bringing it to a boil.) When using a sugar-based barbecue sauce, apply it toward the end of the cooking time. The sugar in these sauces burns easily and should not be exposed to prolonged heat.

8. KEEP IT COVERED. When cooking larger cuts of meat and poultry, such as a whole chicken, leg of lamb, or prime rib, use the indirect method of grilling or barbecuing. Keep the grill tightly covered and resist the temptation to peek. Every time you lift the lid, you add 5 to 10 minutes to the cooking time.

9. GIVE IT A REST. Beef, steak, chicken – almost anything you grill-will taste better if you let it stand on the cutting board for a few minutes before serving. This allows the meat juices, which have been driven to the center of a roast or steak by the searing heat, to return to the surface. The result is a juicier, tastier piece of meat.

10. NEVER DESERT YOUR POST. Grilling is an easy cooking method, but it demands constant attention. Once you put something on the grill (especially when using the direct method), stay with it until it’s cooked. This is not the time to answer the phone, make the salad dressing, or mix up a batch of your famous mojitos. Above all, have fun. Remember that grilling isn’t brain surgery. And that’s the gospel!

The Tools of the BBQ Trade – Grill Charms

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

Our good friend Leslie Haywood and fellow Shark Tank alumni has a great grilling accessory called Grill Charms.  Think wine charms, but for the grill!!!

Leslie came up with the idea for Grill Charms at a dinner party she was hosting when her husband served her an extra hot Jamaican Jerk piece of chicken instead of the mild one she had requested – he had forgotten which piece was which on the grill.  Since this event goal has been to “insure every American gets what they want – how they want it – hot off the grill.”

How do you use Grill Charms?  Grill Charms can be used prior to grilling by placing the charm in the meat or vegetable to indicate temperature, level of food seasoning and spice or to address health or allergy concerns.  Leslie likes to say that, “Your food is personalized before, during and after it’s cooked.”

Grilling season is just around the corner – make sure you check out Grill Charms.  Pork Barrel BBQ and Grill Charms are a perfect combination for any great BBQ!!!  Check out Leslie’s appearance on Shark Tank!