Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff
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@canefan said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@nzzp meat looks great. I thought the lamb was wrapped around the steak like a chub?
it was going to be, but then I deconstructed it andcooked it separately. Easier, and similar outcome (tasty goodness)
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@nzzp said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@canefan said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@nzzp meat looks great. I thought the lamb was wrapped around the steak like a chub?
it was going to be, but then I deconstructed it andcooked it separately. Easier, and similar outcome (tasty goodness)
Nice move, probably taste better with all meats seared up
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@Crucial said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Looks great. I'm just still a bit puzzled about the need/desire for two different meats at the same time.
It was the recipe.
I dunno why, ethnic food -- kind of like surf'n'turf I guess, but with an greco turkish twist.
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@Crucial said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Looks great. I'm just still a bit puzzled about the need/desire for two different meats at the same time.
Sounds like a doner style chub situation. The chubs when hand made have players of meat individually stacked around the spit
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@canefan also, amusingly, I had massive flare ups because of the basting, and now have hair on one forearm, and not on the other. Singeing FTW ... honestly it was fun, built up a crunch crust of marinade, but at the cost of massive flames. So much fun, I love real charcoal BBQ.
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Dinner last night was an Italian beef mince ragut, with a rigatoni n cheese topping. I like to consider it an Italian cottage pie. Very similar ultimately to lasagne. The key is to slow cook the mince and vege mix for a couple of hours after sweating down the veg and browning the mince.
Veg base was finely diced carrot, onion and celery, roasted red peppers, cherry tomatoes and garlic. Soften in a crock pot on hob in olive oil, add herbs (i just used dried mix last night) then brown mince. Add jar of passata and chuck into the oven at 140 for a couple hours. The result is essentially a bolognese sauce or ragut. Cool a little so it thickens then put into a glass roasting dish, top with rigatoni n cheese (also partially cooled so it doesn't run into the meat sauce) and allow to warm through in the oven again before serving. The ratio i had was around 2:1 meat vs pasta and cheese sauce.
Rich, and perfect to eat from a bowl on the couch watching the Crusaders.
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@shark said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Dinner last night was an Italian beef mince ragut, with a rigatoni n cheese topping. I like to consider it an Italian cottage pie. Very similar ultimately to lasagne. The key is to slow cook the mince and vege mix for a couple of hours after sweating down the veg and browning the mince.
Veg base was finely diced carrot, onion and celery, roasted red peppers, cherry tomatoes and garlic. Soften in a crock pot on hob in olive oil, add herbs (i just used dried mix last night) then brown mince. Add jar of passata and chuck into the oven at 140 for a couple hours. The result is essentially a bolognese sauce or ragut. Cool a little so it thickens then put into a glass roasting dish, top with rigatoni n cheese (also partially cooled so it doesn't run into the meat sauce) and allow to warm through in the oven again before serving. The ratio i had was around 2:1 meat vs pasta and cheese sauce.
Rich, and perfect to eat from a bowl on the couch watching the Crusaders.
That sounded good right up until the very last bit.
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So, I had a financial windfall last week, and I'm looking to buy a proper grill.
What are you boys running? Should I just shell out for the Kamado Joe classic?
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@mariner4life love me some kamado action fella, just super versatile.
Big question is ceramic or insulated steel. Ceramic is more traditional, easier to learn, uses more fuel, and is goddamn heavy. Also can break. Steel is light, portable, skittish, cheaper to buy and doesn't break. But uses less fuel - so can have less smoke on things.
No bad option really. I rock a Bubba Keg, now called the Big Steel Keg... it has two bottle openers on it for southern american badassery. Have pushed a bunch of mates into Kamado Akorn by Char-Grillers... it's cheap, cheerful and bloody good fun
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@nzzp said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Bones you're smarter than the rest of us. Admit it.
Why would you even say this, about anything...
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@mariner4life said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
So, I had a financial windfall last week, and I'm looking to buy a proper grill.
What are you boys running? Should I just shell out for the Kamado Joe classic?
Kamado Joe Ceramic! End of! You will not regret it. Not one day!
Get the big one if you like to entertain.
That is certainly my next BBQ when windfall comes along.
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@Hooroo said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Get the big one if you like to entertain.
Get the big one only if you like to entertain a lot.
I made the mistake of getting too large a BBQ and as a result hardly ever use it because unless I'm roasting half a hog its simply too much of a ball ache.
Mind you almost everyone has more mates than I. In which case go for it. I did 2 whole sirloins in it for 30 people (once ) and apart from the nerve wracking 45 minute resting time it was awesome
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@dogmeat said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Hooroo said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Get the big one if you like to entertain.
Get the big one only if you like to entertain a lot.
Absolutely agree. People often fall into this trap - they over-spec their BBQ, and also their pizza oven, sleeping bag, etc.
Personally I use a combo of a baby weberQ, and the Kamado. WeberQ for wet winter nights where we just want to cook - and we cook on it probably 2-3 times a week through the year. Naan, steak, meatballs, etc - anything that would get fried can go into the bbq. Helps it is in a wee bbq house that's covered and well lit. Then the big charcoal for bigger cooks. Gas is inferior, but convenient, fast and reliable.
When it's a party, just run both at the same time. In fact, I borrowed my mate's bbq the last time we had 90 people around for a feed, and just ran three.
last suggestion - don't go nuts with accessories, particularly temp control units. You probably don't need it once you've got some practice. Start with dry runs, and forgiving pork shoulders until you have confidence. I crank up a brisket, and literally go to sleep at the regular time. Don't bother checking overnight unless I happen to wake up.
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@mariner4life said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
So, I had a financial windfall last week, and I'm looking to buy a proper grill.
What are you boys running? Should I just shell out for the Kamado Joe classic?
I love my akorn, easy to use, economical and the food is great. If you don't want gas you could buy an akorn junior to cut your teeth on, then decide what you want in a bigger version once you know more. Definitely buy a multi probe thermometer
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@mariner4life check this out for comparison - I don't know the cost of Kamado in Australia, but container door did some competitive pricing here in NZ
$799 for a ceramic - google it though, and get some reviews I suggest.