The Standard (St. Catharines)

Chuck roast sings after a slow grill

- AMERICA’S TEST KITCHEN

For our Shredded Barbecued Beef, we cut a chuck roast into quarters. The smaller pieces of beef absorbed more smoke flavour and cooked much faster. After cooking the meat in a disposable roasting pan on the cooler side of the grill for a few hours, we flipped all four pieces, wrapped the pan in foil, and placed the roast in the oven to finish cooking. For a barbecue sauce with richer flavour, we sautéed the onions in beef fat from the pan. Chili powder and pepper added bite, while ketchup, vinegar, coffee, Worcesters­hire sauce, brown sugar, and the beef juices rounded out the flavours.

If you prefer a smooth barbecue sauce, strain the sauce before tossing it with the beef. We like to serve this beef on white bread with plenty of pickle chips. Three medium wood chunks, soaked in water for 1 hour, can be substitute­d for the wood chips on a charcoal grill.

Shredded Barbecued Beef

Servings: 8-10

Start to finish: 6 hours

1 tablespoon salt

1 tablespoon pepper 1 teaspoon cayenne pepper 1 (5- to 6-pound) boneless beef chuck-eye roast, trimmed and quartered

1 (13 by 9 inch) disposable aluminum roasting pan

3 cups wood chips, soaked in water for 15 minutes and drained

1 onion, chopped fine

4 garlic cloves, minced

1⁄2 teaspoon chili powder 1 1⁄4 cups ketchup 3⁄4 cup brewed coffee 1⁄2 cup cider vinegar 1⁄2 cup packed brown sugar 3 tablespoon­s Worcesters­hire sauce

1⁄2 teaspoon pepper

Combine salt, pepper, and cayenne in small bowl. Pat meat dry with paper towels and rub evenly with spice mixture. Wrap meat in plastic wrap and let sit at room temperatur­e for at least 1 hour or refrigerat­e up to 24 hours. (If refrigerat­ed, let sit at room temperatur­e for 1 hour before grilling.) Before cooking, unwrap meat and transfer to disposable pan. Using two large pieces of heavy-duty aluminum foil, wrap soaked chips in two foil packets and cut several vent holes in tops.

For a charcoal grill: Open bottom vent completely. Light large chimney starter half filled with charcoal briquettes (3 quarts). When top coals are partially covered with ash, pour into steeply banked pile against 1 side of grill. Place wood chip packets on coals. Set cooking grate in place, cover, and open lid vent halfway. Heat grill until hot and wood chips are smoking, about 5 minutes.

For a gas grill: Place wood chip packets directly on primary burner. Turn all burners to high, cover, and heat grill until hot and wood chips are smoking, about 15 minutes. Leave primary burner on high and turn other burner(s) off. (Adjust primary burner to maintain temperatur­e between 250 F and 300 F.)

Place pan of meat on cool side of grill. Cover (positionin­g lid vent over meat if using charcoal) and cook until meat is deep red, about 2 hours. During final 20 minutes, adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 300 F.

Flip meat over in pan, cover pan tightly with foil, and roast beef in oven until fork slips easily in and out of beef, 2 to 3 hours.

Transfer meat to large bowl, tent loosely with foil, and let rest for 30 minutes. Skim fat from accumulate­d juices in pan; reserve 2 tablespoon­s fat. Strain defatted juices; reserve 1/2 cup juice. Combine onion and reserved fat in medium saucepan and cook over medium heat until onion has softened, about 10 minutes. Add garlic and chili powder and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Stir in ketchup, coffee, vinegar, sugar, Worcesters­hire, pepper, and any accumulate­d meat juices and simmer until thickened, about 15 minutes. Using two forks, pull meat into shreds, discarding excess fat or gristle. Toss meat with 1/2 cup sauce. Serve, passing remaining sauce separately.

Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 407 calories; 8 g fat; 155 mg cholestero­l; 1076 mg sodium; 29 g carbohydra­te; 1 g fibre; 24 g sugar; 53 g protein.

 ?? CARL TREMBLAY
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shredded Barbecued Beef makes a flavourful messy, open-faced sandwich.
CARL TREMBLAY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shredded Barbecued Beef makes a flavourful messy, open-faced sandwich.

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