All posts tagged hasty bake

Out of Retirement (But Still a Dandy)

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This weekend I cleaned up my old Hasty Bake that was stuck in the back of the garage and fired it up for a barbecue competition.  It had not seen the light of day for a couple of years.  I touched up the outside with hi-temperature black paint and cleaned and seasoned up the grates.

Dang. I had forgot how great it cooked!  Don’t know why I retired it… my Weber kettles are just tad more convenient for an evening grill.

Why do I love thee?  Let me count the ways:

  • Mucho cooking surface.  Easily had three large racks on it.  Easily could of added more ribs or a large pork butt.  Check out the large racks laying on the grates.  Still had room at the inn too!  
  • Great temperature control with the firebox that cranks up or down.  I adjusted temperatures several times just by turning a handle that easily controls the firebox.
  • Simple access to the firebox.  Open the side door, add coal or wood chunks without peaking under the lid. “if you are looking, you aren’t cooking”.

I have had this unit well over 12 years. It has weathered winters, rain, snow, sleet, grease fires, trailer rides and much more.

Although not the grill for a novice or weekend warrior…to much of an investment, I highly recommend a Hasty Bake to anyone who loves to barbecue and grill.

Post Memorial Day, Hard Hitting Grilling Analysis

I found the following blog post on Yahoo last weekMy expert analysis appears in red italics.  Enjoy

In honor of Memorial Day, we at Serious Eats got eight hot grilling tips from Adam Perry Lang, a remarkable chef and grill master. Adam opened Daisy May’s BBQ in 2003, which has shocked those who thought outstanding barbecue couldn’t exist in Manhattan. He told us the wrong ways people try to grill and how to make them right.

8 Wrong Ways to Grill From Adam Perry Lang

Using a Flimsy Grill Brush: Invest in the sturdiest one you can; one with heavy tines (the coarse brush hairs) that won’t fall out. In this case, price doesn’t always indicate quality. Just get a sturdy-looking one, not necessarily a fancy one.  I am not sure about this one. When I do baste (which is not often) I prefer either a spritzer or a silicone basting brush, which is much easier to clean and disinfect.  Next time you are barbecuing, try putting some apple juice in a clean spritzer and mist your meat several times.  Beats scraping off your bark. (the crusty, spicy outer coating on your meat)

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Using Dull Spices: Don’t ruin a great cut of meat with dull spices. Buy small amounts and buy them fresh (and often). Try anything from Ancho or Hatch chile powder to coarsely ground fresh black pepper, apple juice, or bourbon.  Can’t really argue about this tip, but boy is this hard for the average grilling Joe (or Jill). Keeping fresh spices is difficult and requires much diligence.  Those one and two teaspoons of exotic spices are killer.  When buying quality spices  I still am a big believer in Penzeys, although many cities now have their own spice stores. Buy local when at all possible.

Cooking Meat on the Wrong Heat: Tougher, collagen-rich cuts should be on a relatively lower indirect heat. Collagen is the tough stuff that converts to gelatin when it’s cooked right and gives barbecue that stick-to-your-ribs luscious texture. Meat with a lot of intramuscular fat (the marbling), on the other hand, should cook on direct heat. Lean cuts of chicken are actually best on moderate heat.  He is preaching to the choir here.  A staple of my BBQ classes is the discussion on grilling and BBQ temperatures.  However (and departing from conventional BBQ wisdom) I am finding  I can BBQ at higher temps (275-300 degrees) with great success if I use a little foil.  Speeds things up with little or no loss of quality.

Not Soaking Wood Chips: Often, the wood you’re using will be too dry, which won’t release that beautiful smolder. The water slows down the burn because the water has to cook off before the wood around it ignites. While this is happening, you get just the right amount of smoke.  OK…this is BBQ 101.  Kind of like looking both ways before crossing a road.

Removing Corn From Its Husk: When grilling corn, leave the ear in its husk. This ensures that the corn will stay sweet and juicy throughout the cooking process. A bit random.   Try this technique just to be a contrarian;  remove corn from husk.  Baste corn with Italian dressing, wrap in lightly dampened paper towel.  Wrap in tin foil.  Place on grill (direct- medium/low) for about 25-30 minutes)  Learned this from Mad Dog and Merrill many years ago.

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Improperly Extinguishing Flare-Ups: Some chefs are very averse to them but, hey, they’re inevitable, so just embrace them. Whatever you do, don’t try to extinguish them with water. You wouldn’t put out a grease fire with water, right? When you see an unwanted flare-up, don’t panic. Just move your meat to another hot part of the grill. If you’re still getting flare-ups and are afraid that your meat might burn, retreat to the lower-temperature zone. If your grill doesn’t have a lower temp, try stacking any meat that needs a break from the heat on top of one that doesn’t. Pretty good advice.  Although a spritzer of water has extinguished many a small flare up.  Grease fires are nasty though.  One time, after recently coming home from a BBQ Competition with my Hasty Bake, I fired up the unit for a cook only to discover that some of the grease of pork butt had splattered on the side of the grill during it’s bumpy journey home (I forget to empty out the drip tray).  Within minutes, I had black smoke and flames bellowing out of my old Hasty Bake.  The scars remain, even though I have repainted several times. This can happen with any grill, so be careful after long cooks with fatty meats.  Take care of the grease pan.

Forgetting the Post-Grill Marination: Instead of taking meat from the cooker and putting it on a dry cutting board, I paint a layer of glaze or barbecue sauce on the board. I drizzle on oil and add salt, pepper, herbs, and things like green apple, garlic, jalapeno, lemon zest grated on the Microplane.  What the heck is a microplane?  Oh well, marinate if you like.  Whatever.   I do like a little olive oil on steaks.  For my BBQ meats (ribs, brisket, pork butts) I use a heavy yellow mustard slather. I never use BBQ Sauce though.  That sugar burns brother!  I finish with BBQ sauce…never start with BBQ sauce.

Running Out of Fuel: Be prepared with more than you think is enough! The last thing you want is to be caught with half a tank of propane or too little charcoal.  I find that propane is easier to run out than charcoal.  I see my bags of charcoal.  For propane I rely on the weight gauges or other type of gauges.  Good advice- there is nothing worse than unfinished business at the grill.

Grilling in the Rain. Just Grilling in the Rain.

Rain is in the forecast for the Silver Lake BBQ Competition.  I will need to do my best Fred Astaire impression I’m afraid.

It makes me yearn for The Big Green Egg.  The finest foul-weather grill/bbq in the world.  I just have to make due with my Webers and Hasty Bake….adjust for longer cooking times.  The interesting thing about bad weather at  a cookoff, is that it can throw off some teams with less experience.

My next post will be after the event.  Goals:  1) Top 5 finish.  2) Three top ten call outs.

We’ll see.

Charcoal Grill Advice

Looking for a great grill? Try a Hasty Bake. Very versatile (high and low temperature grilling), tremendous cooking surface (I  had 12 cornish hens, glazed with a lime-honey-chile sauce,  sitting upright on the little V-8 cans in my Hasty Bake. It brought tears to my eyes…it was so darn good)

Check it out.

For the cornish hen recipe, check out this cookbook:

Weber’s Big Book

Technique

I didn’t want to get to far away from my brisket posts, so here is an outline of the technique I used. First, I have bbq’d briskets for several years. It certainly is not my specialty. Briskets are not what a native born Michigander typically barbecues. However, as a required category in the KCBS circuit, I will do a half dozen every year.

My preferred piece of equipment for a brisket is a Big Green Egg or Hasty Bake. The Egg is perfect because of it’s ability to maintain a steady temperature “forever”. The Egg is also a high moisture grill, so I don’t worry about drying out the meat.

With that said, I have been focusing on simplifying my bbq style. I wanted to be able compete (and win) with the basics…which led me to adapt all my recipes to a basic Weber kettle.

I have always tried to do my briskets at 2 hours per pound. Grill temp at around 225 degrees +/-. The kettle is an imperfect piece of equipment. Stripped down to fuel, grate and vents. More of an art form. No thermostaticly controlled pellet auger :)   I also have three young kids at home. Long cooks are almost out of the question. My challenge became, how can I do a brisket in the shortest possible time, but still get it fork tender and moist.

My “aha”moment for brisket came in reading a recipe for beef short ribs. Basically braised in a beef broth, wine and bbq sauce solution. Cooked in the oven at low temps. I tried the recipe and it was great. Now how to adapt for a Weber.

This is what I ended up with. A six pound brisket, seasoned with the rub posted earlier. A Weber kettle, lump charcoal banked on both sides. Four chunks of pecan wood. Once the coals were hot, I placed the brisket in the middle, directly on the grates and added the chunks to the coal. Vents open. Four chunks of pecan create a heavy smudge in a kettle…very heavy. After two hours, I opened the lid. The brisket looked like a meteorite. Burnt in it’s descension to earth. In other words, perfect.

At that point, I layed the brisket out on a piece of heavy duty foil. Big enough to wrap twice. I then poured on a concoction made of beef broth, spicy bbq sauce (Orgasmic Slabs brand) and a bottle of Harp beer. ( I bagged the wine from the original recipe). I crimped the foil lightly, allowing for some steam to escape and placed back on the grill. I did not add any more fuel. Closed the vents slightly and walked away. About 3.5 hours later I returned and closed off the vents. 45 minutes later pulled the brisket and let rest. 30 minutes later, sliced and served.

The words to describe it: moist, flavorful, smokey, and beautiful. A six pound brisket, in just over six hours, that kicked some serious .ss! I have duplicated this several times.  

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