Barbecue! Bible Sauces, Rubs, and Marinades, Bastes, Butters, and Glazes

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Author: Steven Raichlen

ISBN-10: 0761119795

ISBN-13: 9780761119791

Category: Barbecue cooking

STEVEN RAICHLEN IS THE WORLD'S LEADING AUTHORITY...on international barbecue. The recipes in this book are finger-licking good...try them all! --Rich Davis, Creator of K.C. Masterpiece Barbecue Sauce\ Transform meats and seafood into world-class barbecue with the flavor foundations, wet and dry, that give grilled food its character, personality, and soul. Chili-fired rubs, lemony marinades, buttery bastes, and pack-a-wallop sauces, mops, slathers, sambals, and chutneys - in over 200 recipes...

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Marinate skewers of beef tips in Tex-Mex Tequila-Jalapeno Wet Rub before putting them on the grill. Or slather pork chops with B.B. Lawnside Spicy Apple Barbecue Sauce. Or coax a chicken breast to perfection with a Coconut Curry Baste. From Steven Raichlen, author of the big, bad, definitive BARBECUE! BIBLE, comes BARBECUE! BIBLE SAUCES, RUBS, AND MARINADES, BASTES, BUTTERS & GLAZES, an in-depth celebration of those cornerstones on which unforgettable live-fire flavors are built. Here are fiery spice mixtures for massaging into food, sensuous bastes to be brushed on like lacquer, killer marinades, sugary glazes, tangy mops from award-winning barbecue teams, and dozens of sauces, from the classic tomato-based American Sweet and Smoky to a bold Moroccan Charmoula with its medley of fresh herbs and spices. In all, 200 recipes cover the gamut. But BARBECUE! BIBLE SAUCES aims even higher - offering a serious education in flavor. Big flavor. It tells how to use a mortar and pestle to maximize fresh garlic and onions. How to create a failproof fish cure and radically improve home-smoked fish. The best way to handle a Scotch bonnet chili to reap its heat and savor without scorching skin or eyes. How to balance acid, oil, and aromatics in a marinade so that it tenderizes meat, coats the exterior to keep it from drying out during cooking, and adds cannon blasts of flavor. And how to confidently incorporate ingredients like tamarind, lemon grass, star anise, wasabi, marjoram, kaffir lime leaf, and tarragon. Put it all together, and you'll really have your barbecue mojo working.

\ THE ONLY MARINADE YOU'LL EVER NEED\ (page 54)\ If I could use only one marinade for the rest of my life, it would be this one. Redolent with garlic, piquant with fresh lemon juice, and fragrant with extra virgin olive oil, it instantly transports you to the Mediterranean. I can't think of a single food that doesn't taste better bathed in it. You can use it as both a marinade and a basting sauce. If marinating poultry, meat, or seafood, simply set a portion aside for basting.\ 1/4 cup fresh lemon juice\ 1/2 teaspoon hot pepper flakes\ 1/2 teaspoon cracked black pepper\ 1/2 teaspoon coarse salt (kosher or sea), or to taste\ 4 strips of lemon zest\ 3 gloves garlic, crushed with the side of a cleaver or minced\ 1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh parsley\ 1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh basil, cilantro, dill, oregano\ or a mix of all four\ 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil\ Combine the lemon juice, hot pepper flakes, cracked pepper, and salt in a nonreactive (glass, ceramic, or stainless steel) bowl and whisk until the salt crystals are dissolved. Add the lemon zest, garlic, parsley, and basil. Stir or whisk in the olive oil. The virtue of this marinade is its freshness; use it within 1 to 2 hours of making. Stir again before using. Makes 1 cup.\ CHIMICHURRI\ (Argentine Parsley Garlic Sauce, pages 172-3)\ Argentina is home of a pesto-like pugilist called chimichurri. The sauce owes its freshness and bright green color to flat leaf parsley and its pungency to tongue-pounding doses of garlic. (Talk about ingenuity: Parsley is nature's mouthwash, so it helps counteract the breath-wilting fumes of the garlic.) Those are the basic ingredients, but there are as many variations as there are Argentinian grill jockeys. Some even enliven their chimichurri with grated carrot or red bell pepper; others kick up the heat with hot pepper flakes or fresh chilies.\ 1 large bunch of fresh flat leaf parsley, washed, stemmed, and dried\ 8 cloves of garlic, peeled\ 3 tablespoons minced onion\ 5 tablespoons distilled white vinegar or more to taste\ 5 tablespoons water\ 1 teaspoon coarse salt (kosher or sea)\ 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano\ 1/2 to 1 teaspoon hot pepper flakes to taste\ 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper\ 1 cup extra virgin olive oil\ Finely chop the parsley and garlic in a food processor. Add the onion, vinegar, water, salt, oregano, pepper flakes, and black pepper and process in brief bursts until the salt crystals are dissolved. Add the oil in a thin stream. Do not over process; the chimichurri should be fairly coarse. Correct the seasoning, adding salt or vinegar to taste. Makes 2 cups\ COCA-COLA BARBECUE SAUCE (page 162)\ Dare to be different. That's Jim Budros's motto, and his culinary open-mindedness has won the financial advisor turned pit bull boss a championship at the Kansas City Royal International Barbecue Contest. What's different about his barbecue sauce is its main flavoring, an ingredient most people are more likely to drink than cook with: Coke! This isn't quite as strange as it sounds, because Coke is sweet, tart, and spicy - the flavor profile of most great barbecue sauces. Incidentally, pot roast braised in Coca-Cola is a favorite in Venezuela.\ 1 cup Coca Cola\ 1/2 cup A-1 Steak Sauce\ 1 cup ketchup\ 1/2 teaspoon onion powder\ 1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce\ 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder\ 1 teaspoon liquid smoke\ 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper\ Combine all the ingredients in a heavy, non-reactive saucepan and gradually bring to a boil over medium heat. Reduce the heat slightly to obtain a gentle simmer. Simmer the sauce until reduced by a quarter, 6 to 8 minutes. Use right away or transfer to a large jar, cover, cool to room temperature, and refrigerate. The sauce will keep for several months. Makes 2 cups

INTRODUCTION: BUILDING BETTER BARBECUE - THE FLAVOR FACTOR A Strong Foundation Some Basic Definitions About the Recipes in This Book A REFRESHER COURSE: EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT BARBECUING AND GRILLING How to Light a Grill All Fired Up Tools of the Trade A Word on Food Safety SEASONINGS AND RUBS Seasoned Sales and Peppers American Rubs International Rubs MARINADES, WET RUBS, AND SPICE PASTES Marinades Wet Rubs and Spice Pastes BASTES, MOPS, GLAZES, OILS, FINISHING SAUCES, AND BUTTERS Bastes and Mops Glazes and Oils Finishing Sauces and Butters AMERICAN BARBECUE SAUCES WORLD BARBECUE SAUCES Caribbean and Latin Barbecue Sauces European and African Barbecue Sauces Asian Barbecue Sauces SLATHER SAUCES: KETCHUPS, MUSTARDS, STEAK SAUCES, VINAIGRETTES, AND HOT SAUCES Ketchup, Mustards, and Steak Sauces Vinaigrettes Hot Sauces SALSAS, RELISHES, SAMBALS, AND CHUTNEYS Salsa and Relishes Sambals and Chutneys Mail-Order Sources Conversion Table Index