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July is grilling month in the The Star’s House + Home and Food sections. Each Sunday, look for a tip about grilling techniques in H+H, each Wednesday look for a recipe for a dish that can be prepared on the grill in Food.
This week’s tip: Gauging grill temperatures
Most grilling recipes use terms such as “low,” “medium” or “high” heat rather than temperatures. The easiest way to judge grill temperature is to hold your hand 3 to 4 inches above the grate and start counting: “One Mississippi, two Mississippi,” and so on. The number you are at when the heat forces you to pull your hand away corresponds to the temperatures below:
2 to 3: High heat (450 to 650 degrees)
4: Medium-high (400 degrees)
5 to 6: Medium (325 to 350 degrees)
7 to 8: Medium-low (300 degrees)
9 to 12: Low (250 to 275 degrees)
Source: BBQ USA by Steven Raichlen (Workman Publishing, 2003)
This week’s tip: How to grill fish
Oil the grate using tongs holding a folded paper towel or crumpled ball of foil lightly coated with oil.
Marinate fish no longer than 30 minutes or it will get mushy.
Grill fish 10 minutes per inch of thickness
Source: Karen Adler and Judith M. Fertig, authors of Fish & Shellfish Grilled & Smoked (Harvard Common Press, $16)
This week’s tip: Right-size tools
Stephanie Wilson of Kansas City, co-founder of the Slabs competitive barbecue team (theslabs.com), says it’s important to choose tools that are not too heavy. You need to be able to maneuver food around, and if tools are too heavy you can’t control them properly.
Also, make sure handles on tongs, spatula and the grill brush are long enough to keep your hands away from the hot coals.
Wooden handles are best, Wilson says, because they stay cool.
(The rosewood-handled tools pictured cost $15 each at Halls Crown Center.)
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