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COR Grills (pg. 3)
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tubularbills
oh, and charcoal >>>>>> gas hands down.
nchs09
quote:
Originally posted by astroboy
I have a 4 burner gas barbie and a coal powered weber kettle barbie.

whiskers - love the Georgian shashliks.. surely everyone that lived in the former USSR loves those!

PS - the best sauce for these: - cook down some tomatoes (can be canned) until you form a pizza-sauce type consistency.. throw in plenty of finely minced fresh garlic and finely chopped coriander (aka cilantro) - salt and pepper to taste. Chill and serve.
Coriander is not cilantro :wtf:


or is it? wtf
Scottaculous
I love my Big Green Egg, the Swiss Army knife of outdoor cooking. Here it is with the Thanksgiving turkey.



It can smoke, grill, make pizzas, pottery. All parts are replaceable and it's very low maintenance. I've made 20 hour pulled pork, bbq ribs, beer can chicken, cedar plank salmon, and 600 degree seared filets. I haven't gone with a steak house since.
gehzumteufel
quote:
Originally posted by nchs09
Coriander is not cilantro :wtf:


or is it? wtf

According to wikipedia:
quote:
Coriander (Coriandrum sativum) is an annual herb in the family Apiaceae. It is also known as cilantro, particularly in the USA
Scottaculous
quote:
Originally posted by gehzumteufel
According to wikipedia:


I never knew that. :wtf:
KiNeTiC ENeRgY
quote:
Originally posted by Scottaculous
I love my Big Green Egg, the Swiss Army knife of outdoor cooking. Here it is with the Thanksgiving turkey.



It can smoke, grill, make pizzas, pottery. All parts are replaceable and it's very low maintenance. I've made 20 hour pulled pork, bbq ribs, beer can chicken, cedar plank salmon, and 600 degree seared filets. I haven't gone with a steak house since.


That is cool. I want one of those.
Agent0
quote:
Originally posted by whiskers
Hahahaha, that was also the first thing I thought of when I saw the topic title.





You mean grape vine branches?

BTW, we soak the meat (pork or lamb) for a number of hours (min 2 max 24) in seltzer water + a combination of onions, peppers, mushrooms, salt/pepper - afterwards, we either cook the mix on the stove or put it separately on the grill. The cooking times are too different to put onions and meat at once - I used to do it but lately the onions would just burn.


yeah grape vine branches.

i donno about the seltzer water hmmmm, but all the others sounds good. and for the onions, you put them on top of the meat at the last 5-10 mins of grillin, it finishes them off with a nice taste
gehzumteufel
quote:
Originally posted by Scottaculous
I never knew that. :wtf:

haha yeah me either.

What did that egg thing cost?
Sunsnail
There's a difference between coriander and cilantro (seeds vs leaves)
ZeJayMan
best and most simple barbequed deserts.


Take one cadburys flake, insert inside a banana. Stick the banana (still with skin on) back on the gril for 5-10.

Take peaches, halve them. Put inside tinfoil and add a heap tablespoon on brown sugar to each half. wrap up the tinfoil bag and place back on the bbq until caramelised.

epic times.

gehzumteufel
quote:
Originally posted by Sunsnail
There's a difference between coriander and cilantro (seeds vs leaves)

According to wikipedia (lol yes I know :p) it is a US thing to call the seeds and leaves different names.

edit//
From wiki
quote:
In some regions, the use of the word coriander in food preparation always refers to these seeds (as a spice), rather than to the plant itself.
Sunsnail
That's weird that wikipedia would say that seeds aren't part of the plant :rolleyes:
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