Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Baked Potato on the Grill

Howdy Folks,
Here is a great way to bake potatoes on your grill.  I did it the other day, they came out great.  Tasted fantastic.

What you will need:
1 Potato for each person
Spray Oil, (Pam, etc)
Garlic Powder
Black Pepper
Lawry's Seasoning Salt
Aluminum Foil

Wash the potatoes well, remove all the eyes.  Dry the potatoes.  Lay your aluminum foil out, place the clean, dry potato on the foil.  spray with your cooking oil, such as Pam, I used Olive Oil Pam on one side of the potato, sprinkle some black pepper, garlic salt, and seasoning salt.  Flip the potato over and spray the other side, then sprinkle the pepper, garlic and salt on that side.  Wrap the potato in the aluminum foil.

I have a 4 burner grill, I was going to grill some steaks later, so I got the burner going away from the normal area where I grill steaks on, set the burner on high and set the potatoes on the grill.  I turned them one quarter turn every 10 minutes  for one hour, you can tell if they are cooking correctly by gently pushing in on the potato, when it is mushy it is ready.  After the hour, I turned the burner off, grilled my rib eyes, and ate them together.   All I can say is delicious. 

Hope it works for you.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Hickory Smoked Wild Caught Salmon

Howdy Folks, 
Here is my recipe for Hickory Smoked Salmon(Wild Caught Salmon from http://www.socalmeats.com/).  Here is what mine looked like when I was done.


Smoked Wild Caught Salmon purchased frm www.socalmeats.com

It turned out with a beautiful brown pellicle(a skin or coating of proteins on the surface of meat, fish or poultry, which allows smoke to better adhere to the surface of the meat during the smoking process. Useful in all smoking applications and with any kind of animal protein, it is best used with fish where the flesh of, say, Salmon,  forms a pellicle, the surface that will attract more smoke to adhere to it than would be the case if you had not used it: Without a pellicle; the fish would be inedibly dry from enough smoking to produce a tasty finished product. It is the pellicle which permits the transformation creating delectable Smoked Salmon.)   In the world of smoking meats the outside skin is also called bark.

You can see by the bottom piece that it separates from the skin very easy, always a good indication that your Salmon is done.  I am not a great photographer but you can almost see how the meat of the Salmon is a bright pink / light orange.  Very Flaky.   Very Tasty.  Almost too salty, if your not a big fan of salt you may try just a little bit less salt in the brine, I plan to next time and will post about the results. 


Brine for Smoking Salmon

4 cups of water
1/4 cup Kosher Salt
1/4 cup Brown Sugar
2 Bay Leaves
1 Stalk Celery
1/2 Onion
2 Garlic Cloves(smashed)

I added the salt and sugar to the water stirred until there was nothing left on the bottom or big clumps in the water.  Chopped the onion(pretty fine), cut the celery into small chunks, chopped then smashed the garlic.  Added the Salmon( about a 1 1/2 pounds) into a glass dish, poured the water over the Salmon, added the onions, celery, garlic and threw in a couple of bay leaves.  Covered and let sit in the frig overnight. (it sat in the brine for around 14 hours). 



The next morning, I took the Salmon out of the brine and sat it on a rack to let it dry.  This is when the pellicle is formed.  Leave it out in a cool, airy place for 2 to 3 hours.  It won't spoil due to salt acting as a preservative.



Smoking the Salmon

I soaked a couple handfuls of hickory wood chips for about 20 minutes, then added them all to the smoker. Let it smoke for 2 hours.  Due to varying temperatures and the thickness of the Salmon, check yours it may or may not be ready after 2 hours.  It is ready when it flakes easily.   My wife heated up some black beans, a little bit of brown rice, and made us a salad to go with it.  Delicious!!! 

Monday, January 9, 2012

Grilling gourmet steak from socalmeats.com

Hi Folks!!!
Dave here, just wanted to write a short article about what I love to do, grill.  Oh, yeah.  Gourmet beef, Seafood, Chicken and even some veggies to go with it.  My favorite is grilling steak, good steak.  I recently ordered some Gourmet Steaks and Seafood from a local business here in Southern California, SoCalMeats.com , they brought them out, let me check the steaks and seafood out first before I paid them.  An amazingly great service, I will definitely buy from them again. 

The steaks were killer, the delivery guy told me that I should grill them from frozen, so I figured hey, why not, never done that before, they sell a bunch of them so they must know what he was talking about.  What he told me is this:(keep in mind this beef and seafood comes in a vacuum sealed, flash frozen state.)

1.  Heat the grill up, put it on high and let the grate get really hot.  Take the gourmet steaks out of the freezer, remove them from the packaging, and sear them for two minutes on each side.  While searing sprinkle some garlic powder, black pepper, and seasoning salt on each side. 

2.  After searing, turn the heat down to just below medium, and finish slow cooking them to your desired temperature.  I like my steaks medium rare, (almost mooing) so I let them cook 6 - 7 minutes on each side and cut into them to check.  I couldn't believe how juicy these steaks were.  I know I am supposed to use a thermometer, you should never cut meat to check it while grilling, but I just can't help myself sometimes. 

Let me tell you, it was that easy.  While I was grilling the wife made us a salad and some black beans, what a wonderful meal.