Miami Herald

Kebabs make it a party: 3 marinades for 3 meats

- BY ROBIN MATHER Chicago Tribune

It’s officially grilling season. Steaks, chicken, burgers and hot dogs will grace the grill through summer’s sultry afternoons and long, soft evenings.

For special occasions, though, offering kebabs will please everyone at the table. Though they’re a little fussy to make, kebabs invariably delight diners. What is it about dinner on a stick?

We have marinades suitable for beef, lamb and shrimp, with suggestion­s for sauces and side dishes that will make your grilling adventure a success.

First, a couple of tips. Skewer meat and vegetables separately. Although the ready-made kebabs offered at grocery store meat counters look appealing, meat and vegetables cook at different speeds. Putting them on the same skewer will mean underdone meat and perfect vegetables – or perfect meat and overdone vegetables. Cherry tomatoes always seem to fall off during cooking.

Leave a bit of space between the pieces when you skewer them so each can cook to perfection.

Whatever your vegetable skewer choices, cook them on a cooler area of the grill, and brush them as they cook with olive oil warmed with crushed garlic, a pinch of salt and freshly ground black pepper.

Plan on one to two skewers of meat or shrimp and one of vegetables for each guest.

Whether you choose wooden or metal skewers, select long ones rather than short. Doing so gives the chef a cooler part of the skewer to use as a handle, which makes turning easier.

Kebabs cook quickly, so you’ll need to babysit them at the grill, turning them frequently.

Lime-marinated skirt or flank steak pairs nicely with saffron rice and a sauce of harissa or Sriracha thinned with Greek yogurt to soften its fierce heat. We like skirt and flank steak for their intensely beefy flavor, but there’s a trick to these sometimes-tough cuts. Slice them across the grain and at an oblique angle – aim for about a 45-degree angle. The strips will be wider and more tender.

If lamb kebabs are your choice, the herby Yemeni sauce called z’hug complement­s lamb’s richness and stands up to the flavors of its robust marinade. Serve on a bed of regular or Israeli couscous.

Shrimp marinated in white wine with orange juice and zest, green onion, crushed garlic and black pepper, then wrapped in bacon before skewering offers a fresh, citrusy flavor profile with smoky overtones. The traditiona­l Mississipp­i favorite comeback sauce is a fine companion (and it’s easy to make).

Steamed or boiled rice dressed with a profusion of chopped fresh herbs – parsley, cilantro, marjoram, thyme, summer savory or a mix, are good choices – would set off the plate beautifull­y.

 ?? ABEL URIBE TNS ?? A wine-citrus-garlic mixture makes a tasty marinade for smoked bacon wrapped shrimp. Comeback sauce, a Mississipp­i staple of mayo, ketchup, hot sauce and flavorings, right, makes a fine companion.
ABEL URIBE TNS A wine-citrus-garlic mixture makes a tasty marinade for smoked bacon wrapped shrimp. Comeback sauce, a Mississipp­i staple of mayo, ketchup, hot sauce and flavorings, right, makes a fine companion.

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