T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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628.1 | Beef is great! | NEXUS::C_HEISLER | | Thu Jun 11 1987 12:15 | 5 |
| We have cooked over mesquite chips (just for the smoke) on our gas
grill. Some of the best foods are beef. Steaks, hamburgers (really
good), etc. I'm sure that pork chops would also be excellent.
Chris
|
628.2 | another shrimp on the barbee | FOCUS1::BACOT | | Thu Jun 11 1987 21:49 | 15 |
|
Chicken cooked over mesquite is good, we have also smoked
a turkey that turned out very well. Salmon seems
to stand up to the flavor of the wood, especially silver salmon.
If you want to avoid overpowering the flavor of the fish,
put the chips on later in the cooking cycle.
There is alot of seafood that works well with this wood, including
shrimp, but I find that very little wood is needed to impart the flavor
An interesting combination is to marinate chicken breasts in a
blue cheese salad dressing, then grill over mesquite,
just before you remove from grill put a slice of cheese on top,
swiss works well.
Ange
|
628.3 | Soft shell crab | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Fri Jun 12 1987 07:52 | 5 |
| At a restaurant on Martha's Vineyard, I had soft shell crab that was drizzled
with butter and grilled over mesquite. MMMMMMMM-mmmmmmm!!
- JP
|
628.4 | Don't want the ash | COMET2::TIMPSON | Religion! Just say no. | Fri Jun 12 1987 10:03 | 11 |
| RE .1
I use a gas grill and Mesquite or Hickory chips, but do not just
lay them in the rock like you would in a charcoal barbaque. You
really don't want the ash accummulating in you grill. I wrap the
chips in aluminum foil (not tightly) and put it on the hot grill
several minutes before I add the meat. The chips will smoke and
flavor the meat. When the chips are exausted then throw them away.
Steve
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628.5 | mesquite salmon steaks | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Sat Jun 13 1987 15:27 | 13 |
| Marinate salmon steaks for at least four hours in the following:
1/4 cup orange juice
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 cup dry white wine
1 tablespoon soy sauce
Place marinated fish in fish basket, and grill over mesquite coals
that have turned nice and white (med - hot). Serve fish with
pasta salad and white wine.
Bon Apetit!
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628.6 | | BAUCIS::MATTHEWS | qualified 4 the palomino world show 1985,86,87 | Mon Jun 15 1987 14:01 | 9 |
| so where can i get somme mesquite chips... are there different
grades???? they have the bricks/blocks at the mexican rest. are
they the same????
btw: i'm in nashua.
and are the chips easier/better than the bricks?
|
628.7 | what kind of marinade works well? | CSCMA::L_HUGHES | | Mon Jun 15 1987 17:15 | 13 |
|
We tried beef steaks grilled over mesquite and it was very nice.
How about marinades? I like to marinade before I grill but I
wasn't sure what kind of marinades would blend with the mesquite
flavor. I wouln't think the oil and vinegar italian dressing type
would work or teriyaki. Anybody had any luck using marinades before
mesquite grilling?
We bought pieces of mesquite wood at a farm stand. The wood
needs to be broken up into smaller pieces. The wood must be soaked
in water to produce the smoke. We have a gas grill, we just shut
off the grill when we are done. The next time we use it, whatever
we barbeque still gets some mesquite flavor.
|
628.8 | | LAGUNA::RIVERA | D. MARIE RIVERA | Wed Jun 17 1987 16:52 | 16 |
| The best kind of marinade for beef is a bottled marinade that we
purchase locally (Los Angeles) at mexican markets. It's similar
to a fajita type marinade, though I don't know the entire
ingredient listing. This works bests with very thinly sliced beef
steaks. You place a layer of beef, pour on some of the marinade
(brand name MOJO CRIOLLO, spanish style marinating sauce), then
put on a layer of sliced onions, and a layer of sliced oranges.
Repeat this process for as much meat as you want to barbeque. For
best results, refrigerate for a few hours. Then cook over the
mesquite, ( we use mesquite only, no gas) until it is done to your
liking.
This is very similar to Carne Asada and goes well with tortillas.
We usually have a mexican barbeque, and serve guacamole, beans,
and rice. After the meat is done, the guests can all make their
own soft tacos.
|
628.9 | For a Southwestern tang... | PSTJTT::TABER | Reliefe is just a NEXT UNSEEN away | Thu Jun 18 1987 12:27 | 14 |
| A good general purpose mixture to soak/baste meat with when going for a
Southwestern/Mexican flavor is just lime juice (say two limes,) a
tablespoon or two of cumin, a couple of crushed/minced garlic cloves and
maybe a little chile powder and/or cayene. A fifteen minute soak is
good for beef or chicken, 3-5 minutes for fish. The longer you soak,
the more the lime juice works into the meat, carrying the other flavors
with it. (The cumin is the flavor <not the HOT> that dominates most
mexican food -- adjust accordingly.) For a switch, you can use orange
juice rather than lime, but OJ is a bit more assertive.
The flavor imparted is much lighter than a soy-based marinade, and won't
overpower the mesquite.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
628.10 | B-B-Q Sauce and Mequite? | CIVIC::SWANSON | Jennifer | Tue Jun 23 1987 14:37 | 7 |
| What about using a barbeque sauce with mesquite? We just got our
gas grill and have been trying out different things. One of the
neighborhood kids sold us some mesquite charcoal and barbeque sauce
as a kit (one of those money-making ideas for school, I guess).
Of course, we wouldn't use the charcoal in the gas grill, but has
anyone tried the combo?
|
628.11 | sounds strange - truely delicious! | CSCMA::L_HUGHES | | Thu Aug 06 1987 10:10 | 8 |
| re: .9
I tried this marinade and it was great! It sounds kind of
strange, I've never heard of this kind of a marinade. The flavor
is wonderful! Thanks for the recipe.
Linda
|
628.12 | mesquit barbeque sauce.. | WHEEL::HOLMES | | Wed Jun 15 1988 14:36 | 4 |
| I don't know the name of the sauce but I tried one last summer down
the cape that had mesquit flavor IN IT. Tasted to fine to me but
I've never cooked over mesquit so I really can't compare but there
was a sauce...
|
628.13 | Soak 'em | HOTLNE::LUCHT | | Tue Jul 05 1994 13:55 | 8 |
| Buy a bag of chips. Take a 1 gallon plastic bucket
and fill it with water. Soak a bunch of chips overnight.
On cooking day, stick your hand in and grab a handfull.
Toss them on the white-hot coals. There will be enough
smoke for the cooking.
Kev --
|