All posts tagged big green egg
Brined turkey on the Big Green Egg
This is a pretty good short and simple video about brining a turkey.
A few comments first:
If using a traditional grill (not a Big Green Egg) you would simply set it up for indirect cooking. I would recommend you use a “v-rack” or “roasting rack” (featured image) and then insert it into an aluminum foil pan. (as opposed to roasting vertical- which is nice…but not always practical)
Measurements should be 1 G of liquid (water and apple juice) and 1 C each of salt and sugar.
4th of July Primer- Part I
This update will focus on the big three: recipes, grills and meats.
Looking to buy a new grill? In my book , two safe choices:
Where to get them? For Weber, in Grand Rapids, MI, I would recommend either Rylee’s Hardware or Kingsland Hardware. (please, tell Sandy at Kingsland, to get a website…..)For The Big Green Egg, Herman’s Boy in Rockford, MI. Tell them JR, Rockford’s original “outdoor cook” sent you!
Why? Quality, value and performance. I have cooked on Weber and The Big Green Egg. Best of show.
How about local meat and produce. (Although focused on west Michigan for now, Certified Grilladelic recommendations are welcome from any hamlet in the world. Just send me some information, reasons why this store is “Certified Grilladelic” and we will make sure the word gets out.)
A Grilladelic Christmas- Perfect Gifts #2
These recommendations are for both the erudite pit boss and the neophyte. Cookbooks.
Becoming a legendary barbecuer does require on-the-job training, but good recipes and techniques can really take time off the learning curve. The key is to get books that have recipes that have not only accessible recipes, but information on technique and some “back-story”. In my humble but expert opinion, grilling and barbecue have so much tradition, that understanding the history of the art, really helps improve performance at the grill.
Here are a few cookbooks, different genres, that are great gifts and the beginning of a great library.
1. Smoke and Spice- My “go-to” book. Superb recipes, especially for charcoal and wood fired pits. I always recommended this as the book for Big Green Egg owners.

2. Paul Kirk’s Championship Sauces and Rubs. This is for the “do-it-yourselfers”. Not only recipes, but how to make your own. Terrific recipes for mustards too.

3. Bruce Aidell’s Complete Sausage Book. Without a doubt, sausage making is not only a lost art but perhaps the most underrated meat for the grill. Great sausages are able to lift the human spirit unlike any other meat. This has great recipes and the essential background on a variety of sausages (The classic sausage is by ‘The Sausage Maker- Rytek Kutas, but this is only for the sausage engineer…)

4. Sunset’s Barbecue Book. Old school and out of print. I bought mine on eBay, where they still are available. This the ultimate drool-inspiring book. It features thirty-plus blue prints of the brick, backyard BBQ pits. Outdoor cooking islands are a hot trend, but before pre-fab, stucco islands, there was the 1930-1950 brick barbecues. I occasionally see some in the backyards of older homes, unfortunately mostly being used as plant or flower pots.

Dream Grill – Part 2
I am considering abandoning my multiple-Weber-grills-plus-an-old-Hasty-Bake strategy for competitions (and home). I still like the old school feel to Webers and the artist in me enjoys the nuances of cooking with a kettle. Every cook is an unique, one-of-a-kind experience.
However, after lunch with my friend and fellow BBQ enthusiast, Harlan, and lamenting my poor showing at Silver Lake, I began thinking that life would be a lot easier, with one big grill, preferable a mobile unit. I do admit, one big portable pit would make my evening family barbecues an exercise in over kill, but over kill can be underrated.
Previously I posted my lust for a Weber Ranch Kettle. Heavy duty, stainless grates, a tremendous cooking surface. It still is number one on my chart, but I am trying to think this through with my head, not my heart. Here is a partial list of the grills that over the next several months, I will do my due diligence on:
My plan is to research these units and share my thoughts. Trying to find the balance between home use and competition use, common sense and “grill-rational thinking” and affordability and wretched excess…



































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