BBQ Sauces, Rubs and Marinades For Dummies
eBook - ePub

BBQ Sauces, Rubs and Marinades For Dummies

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  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
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eBook - ePub

BBQ Sauces, Rubs and Marinades For Dummies

About this book

Think only master chefs can create the savory, succulent barbecue masterpieces you love to eat? Nonsense! BBQ Sauces, Rubs & Marinades For Dummies shows you everything you need to dig in, get your apron dirty, and start stirring up scrumptious sauces, magical marinades, and rubs to remember.

Featuring 100 bold new recipes, along with lots of savvy tips for spicing up your backyard barbecue, this get-the-flavor guide a healthy dose of barbecue passion as it delivers practical advice and great recipes from some of America's best competition barbecue cooks. You get formulas for spicing up chicken, beef, pork, and even seafood, plus plenty of suggestions on equipment, side dishes, and much more. Discover how to:

  • Choose the right types of meat
  • Build a BBQ tool set
  • Craft your own sauces
  • Smoke and grill like a pro
  • Marinate like a master
  • Choose the perfect time to add sauce
  • Rub your meat the right way
  • Whip up fantastic sides
  • Add flavor with the right fuel
  • Plan hours (and hours) ahead
  • Cook low and slow for the best results
  • Avoid flavoring pitfalls
  • Turn BBQ leftovers into ambrosia

Complete with helpful lists of dos and don'ts, as well as major barbecue events and associations, BBQ Sauces, Rubs & Marinades For Dummies is the secret ingredient that will have your family, friends, and neighborhoods begging for more.

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Yes, you can access BBQ Sauces, Rubs and Marinades For Dummies by Traci Cumbay,Tom Schneider in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Art & Culinary Arts. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
For Dummies
Year
2011
Print ISBN
9780470199145
eBook ISBN
9781118052839
Edition
1
Topic
Art
Part I

Centuries of Barbecue Smarts in Four Chapters

In this part . . .
S ure, you can step outside and throw some weenies on the grill, but with just a little preparation and forethought, you can create meals full of wow. This part of the book prepares you for barbecue greatness, giving you the scoop on equipment, ingredients, and techniques that help you cook like a pro.
Chapter 1

Faces of Barbecue: A Pit, a Plateful, a Party

In This Chapter

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Chronicling a short history of barbecue
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Delving into the four regional barbecue styles
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Looking across the oceans for inspiration
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Identifying the big differences between barbecue and grilling
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Injecting thousands of flavors with three techniques
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Glimpsing surefire barbecue techniques
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Getting your barbecue bearings and getting creative
An unmistakable reaction tears through my body when I get barbecue on the brain. Just talking (or reading or even writing) about it incites a bone-deep craving, making my mouth water and my stomach plead.
I know I’m not alone. Barbecue stirs up a visceral reaction everywhere you go, causing cravings that spur enthusiasts to drive all night or get on a train to get their lips around their favorite ribs. The passion that barbecue incites has created deep friendships and broken others when spats over recipes heated to boiling. Ever heard of chicken soup doing that?
Barbecue is a way of cooking, a party, or the food itself — succulent servings of slow-cooked pork shoulder shredded and mixed with sauce or dry-rubbed ribs with a crackling bark full of paprika, cayenne, and cumin. It’s food for laid-back Sundays with friends or raucous family gatherings, for baptisms and funerals and anything in between. It’s a way of life for the cooks who travel from competition to competition and those who stay put, running generations-old family restaurants. It’s no less lifeblood for the devotees who make more-than-weekly trips to a favorite rib joint or for hobbyists who cook their own barbecue at home.
In this chapter, I run through some of the theories about barbecue’s origins and fill you in on the very basics of the cooking method that begat the lifestyle.

First, There Was Fire

Before it became the holy grail of barbecue flavor, smoke was good for keeping away the bugs, and the earliest Americans built fires under their meat while they dried it on frames in the sun to preserve it. Turns out the meat tasted better after the smoke wafted into it, and so started the practice of infusing meat with the flavor of smoke.
Believe that? You have no reason not to, and it’s at least as plausible as any of the 47 or so other theories about how barbecue came to be.
The mysteries of barbecue extend far beyond the origin of the word. (Does it come from the French for “whiskers to tail”? Is it a description of the frames used for roasting meat over fire in the West Indies? Dunno — and neither does anybody else.)
TechnicalStuff

Smoking for preservation: How wood works wonders

Somewhere, somehow, some long-ago human figured out that drying food over smoke kept it from rotting, at least for a while longer than doing nothing would have. Smoking food worked well enough in pre-refrigeration days, but the reason wasn’t pinned down until much later.
Heat sets free a number of organic acids (including acetic acid, or vinegar) from wood. When those acids fly up onto the meat via smoke, they condense on its surface and change the balance of the meat. The result is a surface pH level that’s too low for bacteria to be able to make themselves at home.
Wood smoke also is heavy in phenols — high-acidity compounds that prolong the period of time before meats turn rancid.
As you may guess, not all the many chemicals in wood smoke are good for human consumption or respiration. Lucky, then, that the low temperatures you use for slow smoking don’t release as much of the unhealthy compounds from wood as high heat does. Keeping the meat as far as you can from the wood as it smokes also cuts down on the opportunity for the harmful compounds to get into the meat and, therefore, into you.
In the upcoming sections, I tell you a few things that are known, believed, or completely fabricated about the start and progress of barbecue. In the brazen and lively world of barbecue, lies and half-truths are as good as facts. Sometimes better.

Facts and fibs about barbecue

Some do-it-yourselfers build smokers out of old refrigerators, which is a little ironic: Had refrigeration become a part of everyday living earlier, barbecue might not exist. Without it, people had to preserve meat by salting the bejesus out of it or by smoking it, and that smoking process opened the door for the pits and stands and restaurants that do heady business today.
Barbecue first took hold in the American South and used primarily pork because that’s what was available. As barbecue moved across the country, urban conditions in Memphis led cooks to focus on ribs, which took less time and space (and consequently, money) to cook.
In Texas, where cows are common as dust, beef brisket became the definition of barbecue. (I tell you about brisket and the other common cuts of meat that are used in barbecue in Chapter 4.) Heavy German influence in the area helped bring sausage into the barbecue norm, and hot links (spicy smoked sausages) grew to be another Texas barbecue trademark.
The best of all the barbecue traditions melded in Kansas City, and restaurants and hobbyists all over the country maintained and modified barbecue practices in search of their particular definition of perfection. Many will tell you they’ve found it, and most of these “perfect” barbecue concoctions come from wildly different approaches — including serving crackly pig skin in shredded pork sandwiches; dousing ribs with sauce as a final touch while they’re still on the heat (or cooking them in nothing but rub); and using mustard-, vinegar-, or tomato-based sauces.
Everyone thinks his own barbecue is the best. Everyone is right.

From pit to pellet smoker

With scarce resources, resourceful settlers dug pits and cooked their food over hot coals — a far cry from the high-tech barbecue rigs that the pros use to mimic the results of those centuries-ago methods.
Barbecue spread westward across the United States, just like everything else, and morphed a bit along the way. (Check out the upcoming section, “Touring the Four All-American Barbecue Regions.”)
Holes in the ground gave way to homemade smokers cut from metal barrels. Industrialization brought nicely engineered and executed home charcoal smokers — and later, gas and electric models — into mass production. (Chapter 2 tells you about the current options for barbecue equipment.)
From its simple beginnings, barbecue has become, of all things, a sport, drawing competitors from around the United States to weekend contests where hundreds slave over mobile pits they paid thousands of dollars for in hopes of taking home a trophy, a small check, and big-time bragging rights. What a shock to anyone who just wanted to be able to chew her meat without an overlong struggle.

Touring the Four All-American Barbecue Regions

Great barbecue happens everywhere, but some human yen to codify things begat four regions of barbecue in the United States. Each region has some significance in the story of barbecue, but none is entirely separate from the others. Although the differences among them are a matter for considerable and vehement discussion, the details of the traditions in the various regions have more in common than they don’t. But try telling that to a Tennessean turning up his nose at a Caro...

Table of contents

  1. Title
  2. Contents
  3. Introduction
  4. Part I : Centuries of Barbecue Smarts in Four Chapters
  5. Chapter 1: Faces of Barbecue: A Pit, a Plateful, a Party
  6. Chapter 2: Gathering Must-Have Equipment
  7. Chapter 3: Collecting Ingredients and Using Them Wisely
  8. Chapter 4: Barbecue Methods, Art, and Science
  9. Part II : Preparation Prevails: Using Rubs and Marinades
  10. Chapter 5: Mixing and Matching in Rubs and Marinades
  11. Chapter 6: Crafting Dry Rubs for Any Meat or Taste
  12. Chapter 7: Mixing Tried-and-True Marinades
  13. Part III : The All-Important Sauce Story
  14. Chapter 8: Sorting through the Sauce Story
  15. Chapter 9: Crafting Barbecue Sauces Traditional and Unusual
  16. Chapter 10: Getting Saucy while You Cook: Mop Sauces
  17. Chapter 11: Sauces and Relishes for Dipping and Dashing
  18. Part IV : Entrees and Sides and Then Some
  19. Chapter 12: Something(s) to Serve with Your Barbecue
  20. Chapter 13: A Melange of Main Dishes
  21. Chapter 14: Great Dishes for Leftover Barbecue
  22. Part V : The Part of Tens
  23. Chapter 15: Ten Ways Rookies Ruin Good Meat
  24. Chapter 16: Ten Truer Words Were Never Spoken
  25. Chapter 17: Ten (Or So) Places to Turn for Tips
  26. Chapter 18: Ten World-Famous Barbecue Events
  27. Appendix: Metric Conversion Guide
  28. : Further Reading