Amateur Gardening – 20 July 2019

(Barry) #1

42 AMATEUR GARDENING 20 JULY 2019


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UILD a fire, cook food. It’s no
surprise that men are keen on
barbecues – there’s something
very caveman about them. The
real pleasure is to be had from cooking
on glowing charcoal or wood embers,
but firing up takes a little effort.
Though some charcoal barbecues
have a few bells and whistles, most are
a simple metal bowl or box on legs with
an ashtray at the base and a food grill
above. Good ones will have a cover to
trap heat and smoke food while it cooks.
I use a Smokey Joe barbecue from
Weber. First, consider the charcoal fuel.


Charcoal choice
Lump charcoal, basically chunks of
carbonised wood, lights quickly and
burns quickly – great for fast-cook meat
such as burgers, sausages and kebabs.
Charcoal briquettes are made from
compressed powdered charcoal. They
burn steadily and slowly at a constant
temperature, so are good for roasting
bigger cuts of meat. If you’re using
briquettes, 20 lumps will be plenty for
grilling sausages, burgers and chicken
skewers. For cooking bigger pieces of
meat or bone-in meat you need to cook
longer and slower, so you’ll need more.


Right way to light it up
To light a charcoal barbecue, remove the
cooking grill, place a barbecue lighter in
the base, pile a few charcoal lumps or
briquettes over it and light it. Once it’s
flaming well, place a little charcoal on top
and around the sides. Wait 10 minutes
then pile on the rest of the charcoal and


Charcoal barbecues


Best techniques to get the job right with Tim Rumball


How to use tools


leave until it’s glowing and white with
ash – around 15 to 20 minutes. Rake
the glowing charcoal into an even layer
over the base of the barbecue, then
replace the grill.

Using a charcoal chimney
A barbecue charcoal chimney makes
lighting easier. Put charcoal in the top,
place a lighter tablet on the barbecue
grill, light it and stand the chimney over
it. Leave it for about 15 minutes until the
charcoal is red-hot and ashing over,
then tip it into the base of the barbecue
and replace the grill. Once the
barbecue is hot, remove muck from the
grill rails with a clean, wet rag wrapped
around the end of a wooden spatula,
before placing food on the grill.
It shouldn’t be necessary, but you
can add more charcoal as it burns
down if you need more cooking time.
However, you’ll have to wait while it
heats through. It’s best to start fresh
charcoal in a chimney away from the
barbecue and add it when it is glowing,
so you can keep cooking.

Using firewood as a heat source
If you are cooking over logs on a fire
bowl or chiminea fitted with a barbecue
grill, only burn well-seasoned firewood
logs. Bits of old building timber and
the like, while cheap or even free, may
have been treated with chemicals that
will be released when burned and
could be dangerous. Again, don’t start
cooking until the flames die down and
you have glowing red ash.
Direct cooking straight over the hot
coals is the usual way to barbecue. This
sears meat and seals in flavour, so is
great for sausages, burgers, chicken
skewers and similar. Indirect cooking
involves piling coals to one side or
either side to create a cooler area for
longer, slower cooking. Using the
cooler area will also help to prevent fat
flare-ups, as will not overcrowding the
grill with fatty meats such as sausages.

Best way to cook meat
Let meat warm to room temperature
before putting it on the grill so it cooks
through evenly. When cooking larger
pieces of meat, keep the heat low and
cook for a lot longer, checking the

Barbecuing is a joy of the summer garden. Tim Rumball explains how to get it right


internal temperature of the meat using a
meat probe thermometer. Rest meat for
several minutes after cooking to make
it more tender. Oak, hickory and apple
wood chips, available from barbecue
suppliers, can be used to smoke meat
on the barbecue, adding lots of flavour.
They work best if your barbecue has a
cover. Soak chips in water before adding
to the fire so they burn slower.

Best way to cook veg
Vegetables benefit from barbecue
cooking, too. Sweetcorn, peppers,
asparagus and courgettes are obvious
choices with good texture and great
flavour. Cut peppers in half and deseed,
cut courgettes in half or quarters
longways. Brush on melted butter,
splash on a little balsamic vinegar and
grill. Sweetcorn takes longest – about
15 minutes – a lot less for peppers,
asparagus and courgettes. Many other
vegetables will barbecue – even lettuce
(cut little gem into quarters top to
bottom, brush with oil and sear quickly)
and sweet potato (peel, slice thickly,
brush with oil and barbecue slowly).

Keep it safe
Keep a first-aid kit and fire blanket handy
just in case of any problems, burns or
cuts. And keep children and pets well
away from the barbecue area.

Follow the rules and you can enjoy the
delights of outdoor barbecue cooking

Pile the coals on either side for
indirect, longer, slow cooking
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