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Have everything you need for grilling—the food, marinade, basting sauce, seasonings, and equipment—on hand
and at grillside before you start grilling.

Oil and vinegar-, citrus-, 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 during the last 3 minutes of cooking). When using a sugar-based barbeque 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.

Whiskey's Bucking Bronco!

There’s nothing worse than running out of charcoal 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 221/2” grill needs one chimney’s worth of coals).

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 5-10 minutes to the cooking time.

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 and a stiff wire brush to finish scrubbing the grate.

Remember: Grilling is a high-heat cooking method. In order to achieve the
seared crust, charcoal flavor, and handsome grill marks associated with
masterpiece grillmanship, you must cook over a high heat. How high? At least 500° F. Although I detail this elsewhere, 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 After 3 seconds, the force of the heat should force you to snatch your hand away. When indirect grilling,
preheat the grill to 350° F.

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.

Oil the grate just before
placing the food on top, if
necessary (some foods don’t require that the grate 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.
Grilling is an easy cooking method, but 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!
—The Barbecue! Bible, Stephen Raichlen,
©May 2000.
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 onto the coals.
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