The Denver Post

Grilling your food, for a full day of meals

- By Bill St. John, Special to The Denver Post

If you’re planning to grill come Memorial Day or on the weekend days in front of it — and, I am guessing, most of us are — why not make an entire day of it?

You can grill all day long and make an entire meal from it or — should you fancy — an entire day’s eating from one grill.

Some cultures cook entire meals in or on a single outdoor heat source, usually some sort of pit, such as New Zealand’s Maori hangi, or a goat barbacoa and its fixings in Oaxaca, southern Mexico.

If it’s an above-ground grill, though, just pace out the meal in stages. It’s a grand way to set out a buffet of food for a large group.

If you choose to do breakfast on the grill, fire up foods like grilled pineapple or peaches, or grilled French toast, bacon and ham slices. Easy peasy.

But early on, certainly grill those foods that will be able to safely sit around on platters for a good portion of the

day before the main event. Many sorts of grilled vegetables fit this bill: sliced soft squashes (zucchini, yellow summer squash, chayote); red or green tomato halves; large mushroom caps; cobs of corn (with or without husking); eggplant slices or small whole eggplants; onion wedges; asparagus; different kinds of sweet or spicy peppers; wedges of romaine lettuce (yes!) or radicchio; halved or sliced fennel bulb; and parboiled or blanched firm vegetables, such as potato slices (or small whole spuds), yam or sweet potato, beet, carrot or parsnip.

If you soften up (in the microwave or in boiling water or steam) cruciferou­s vegetables such as cauliflowe­r, broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts and turnip, they come off the grill nicely, too. In addition to soft squashes, if you pre-cook slightly firm squashes such as acorn or butternut, finishing chunks of them on the grill makes for added flavor as well.

Grilling ingredient­s for sauces or condiments adds a depth of flavor and aroma that normal, stovetop cooking doesn’t. And these foods can be made well before mealtime. Grill tomatoes, tomatillos, peppers, corn, even garlic and ginger in order to prepare salsa rojo or chimichurr­i or other piquant and flavorful sauces for grilled meats and vegetables.

Make a compound butter from grilled scallions or leeks (or ramps, if you can find them), chopping them finely and mixing them into room-temperatur­e unsalted butter. That’d be a nice treat with which to top other grilled foods down the line.

More ahead-of-time grilling possibilit­ies: low-water, socalled “grilling cheeses” such as the Greek or Greek-style halloumi or kefalotyri, Mexican queso panela, some drier provolone, and cheese labeled “grilling cheese.” They’re around.

Closer to main mealtime is the hour to begin grilling flatbreads and slices of firm crusted bread, slathered with olive oil and flavored with pepper, salt and herbs. The bread possibilit­ies are nearly endless.

And, we’re off: shellfish, seafood, freshwater fishes, all manner of beast or fowl — whole, fileted or as sausages — and the vegetarian or vegan possibilit­ies of grilled firm tofu, tempeh and seitan. Recipes for all these truly are endless.

But don’t forget dessert; it, too, can fly off the grill. Grilled fruits, again, are delicious (bananas or watermelon are especially tasty when grilled). So is grilled pound cake or other sweet, firm baked goods.

S’mores are a gimme as a grilled dessert, but consider making small packets of them, too: two squares of graham cracker sandwichin­g some semisweet chocolate chips or a thin bar of chocolate, and a marshmallo­w or two, all wrapped in a foot-square sheet of aluminum foil and heated five minutes on the waning embers of the grill. Kids go crazy, I’ve heard.

Lamb Chops Scottadito with Charred Cherry Tomatoes

Serves 4; bonappetit.com

Ingredient­s

4 garlic cloves, finely chopped ½ cup finely chopped rosemary

¼ cup olive oil, plus more for drizzling

12 lamb rib chops (about 2½ pounds total)

Kosher salt, freshly ground pepper 1 pound cherry tomatoes, preferably on the vine

Directions

Combine garlic, rosemary, and ¼ cup oil in a large bowl. Working one at a time, pound lamb chops between 2 sheets of plastic wrap to about ¼-inch thick; trim any excess fat. Season with salt and pepper and add to marinade; turn to coat. Cover and chill at least 2 hours and up to 1 day. Prepare a grill for medium-high heat. Remove lamb chops from marinade and wipe off marinade.

Grill lamb chops, turning often and moving around on grill as needed, until charred on both sides, about 3 minutes. Transfer to a platter. Drizzle tomatoes with oil; season with salt and pepper. Grill in a grill basket or large cast-iron skillet until lightly charred and blistered, about 4 minutes. Serve tomatoes alongside lamb.

 ?? Richard DeAratanha, Los Angeles Times ?? Grilled avocado and tomato salad.
Richard DeAratanha, Los Angeles Times Grilled avocado and tomato salad.
 ??  ?? Grilled chicken and vegetables.
Grilled chicken and vegetables.
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