Keep it hot: Of course you light your charcoal in a chimney starter. When you pour out the coals, leave one or two burning embers in the starter, then add a fresh batch of charcoal. The embers will light the coals—no newspaper or fire starter needed.
Keep it clean: A clean grill grate is essential to prevent sticking and give you great tasting food. Ideally, you’ll have a grill brush, but if you don’t, make a luddite grill brush by crumpling a sheet of aluminum foil into a ball. Clutch it between the jaws of long-handled tongs, and use it to scrub the bars of the grate.
Keep it lubricated: One cool way to oil your grate is to impale half of an onion on a long-handled meat fork and dip in vegetable oil. Rub it across the bars of the grate.
Keep it lubricated 2: Grease your grill grate with a chunk of bacon or steak fat. Great smell. Great flavor.
Where there’s smoke: Grilling on a gas grill? Don’t despair—you can still add a smoke flavor. Place unsoaked hardwood chunks into a smoking pouch by folding a cup or so of un soaked hardwood chips in heavy duty aluminium foil to make a pillow shaped pouch. Poke holes in the top with a skewer and place under the grate directly over one of the burners and start grilling when you see smoke.
Spin control: Prevent skewered foods like shrimp from spinning by threading them on two parallel bamboo skewers. Or use our Best of Barbecue Double Prong Skewers.
Flame-free skewers: The bamboo skewer is the backbone of great sates and shish kebab. Conventional wisdom holds that by soaking the skewers in water first, you can prevent the exposed part from burning. Conventional wisdom is wrong.
Instead, make a grill shield by folding a sheet of heavy-duty aluminum foil like a business letter, then sliding it beneath the exposed part of the skewers. Or use our Best of Barbecue Grill Shield.
Beer bottle fire control: Flare-ups threatening your food? Make a beer bottle fire extinguisher. Place your thumb over the top of an open longneck bottle of beer. Shake the bottle gently, then slide your thumb back a little to direct a thin stream of beer toward the fire. Great for basting grilled meats, too.
Char man of the board: Everybody loves planked salmon. Next time you make it, don’t soak the plank first as is recommend in many cookbooks (including in my own). Instead, char the plank on one side over a hot fire (just until you see smoke), then turn it over and place the fish on top. Direct grill the fish over a hot fire: the bottom of the plank will char, too, releasing an incredible smoke flavor. Awesome just got better.
Grill your lemons: A squeeze of lemon or lime juice is the classic sauce for grilled fish. Boost its flavor by grilling or smoking the lemon. Looks cool and tastes even better. Note: grilled lemonade or margaritas made with grilled limes are beyond awesome.