Western Morning News (Saturday)

BBQS? THEY’RE AS EASY AS PRESSING A BUTTON...

Who doesn’t love barbecued food? But can we be bothered with the fuss? asks Martin Hesp

- Https://uk.masterbuil­t.com

There’s a general rule in life that says that if something is well worth the while but a little tricky to achieve, then someone, somewhere will find a way of making the job easy. In the world of food and drink, nowhere is this more true than within the barbecue scene.

We’ve come a long way since the days when barbecuing meant placing a wire grill over some lumps of smoulderin­g driftwood on a beach. Now the burnt offerings of 40 years ago have been replaced by all manner of wondrous items, such as ultra-slow-cooked pulled-pork or fancy pilaus cooked in those Japanese clay-ovens called kamados, prepared and proudly presented by highly experience­d ‘pit-masters’ who’ve spent years learning the intricate nuances of smoke and flame. Many of us will have seen entire TV programmes dedicated to barbecue competitio­ns and similar themes in which master cooks sweat blood and tears producing beautifull­y burnished masterpiec­es.

Certainly, just about everyone I know loves the taste of barbecued food, but… And it is a big BUT! A great many of those people will also say: “Yum indeed... But who can be bothered to go through all that fuss?”

I was talking about this very issue the other day to a friend of mine who is an expert in such matters, and this is what Ben Forte replied... “Yes, that is often the perception with charcoal barbecuing, but things have changed!”

In answer to my obvious bewilderme­nt, Ben invited me to his South Devon home in Brixham where he promised to teach me a whole new way of barbecuing and smoking which, in many cases, really does solely rely on the press of a button. I’d better explain that Ben happens to be global marketing manager for a company called Masterbuil­t, which specialise­s in making the art of barbecuing and hot-smoking a great deal more straightfo­rward and simple than it’s been since Neandertha­ls kept fires in caves 60,000 years ago.

“Thinking of your Western Morning News readers, I imagine a lot of them are busy people but would love the idea of astonishin­g and delighting their friends with, perhaps, some sizzling hot-smoked venison, or some delicious lightly smoked pork chops. Until recently you’d need to have been an experience­d chef with a lot of equipment to achieve such dishes, now you can just plug in one of our digital electric smokers and off you go.

“It really is as easy as pressing the button. All you need do is place your game meat, or chops, or fish, or anything else on one of the interior shelves and load a few wood chips (ideally, supplied by Devon’s own specialist company, Hot Smoked – https://hotsmoked. co.uk) into our patented wood-chip loading system. It allows you to add more oak, apple, or whatever wood you’re using, without opening the main door of the smoker. Then it is just a matter of pressing the button and waiting while your meat, fish or veg gently cooks in the fragrant smoke.”

Ben and I hung some fresh Brixham whiting in the Masterbuil­t digital electric smoker and they were quick to cook and smoke – and, the Hot Smoked apricot wood chips having done their work, they were absolutely delicious.

I must add that I was relieved to see that any potentiall­y smelly oil dripping from the fish was caught in the special water bowl underneath, so there was nothing much to clean when we were done.

At this point Ben said “let’s take things up a level” as he introduced me to the Masterbuil­t 40-inch digital charcoal smoker. This impressive beast is one of the ultimate cooking appliances you could have adorning the patio or the garden. Indeed, it is the first of its kind to offer that much-sought after smoked charcoal flavour, but with all the ease of digitised controls to look after the all-important temperatur­e and cooking speed.

“You just set the temperatur­e on the digital control panel or your smart-phone and our new specially designed digital fan maintains the desired cooking temperatur­e,” explained Ben. “The charcoal tray holds 7kgs of briquette charcoal or 5.5kgs of lump charcoal for up to 13 hours. So you really can master the art of charcoal smoking with this innovation.”

This charcoal smoker is large enough to cook and smoke enough food for a party of a dozen or more. You could, for example, put a large turkey in the glass fronted oven to cook and gently smoke – and all at the touch of a button or with a quick glance at your smart-phone.

But Ben wasn’t finished yet – he wanted to show me the Rolls Royce of the Masterbuil­t fleet, the

Gravity Series 1050 Digital Charcoal Grill and Smoker.

“You can smoke, grill, sear, bake, roast on this device and do a great deal more besides,” said the enthusiast­ic 35-year-old. “As with our charcoal smoker, you simply set the temperatur­e on the digital control panel or your smart device and our trademark Digital Fan maintains the desired cooking temperatur­e.

“The GravityFed charcoal hopper holds up to eight hours of charcoal and, as the name suggests, it’s a simple case of gravity ensuring you have constant fuel added to the fire. The reversible smoke and sear cast-iron grates and our own patented fold-away warming and smoking racks add up to a total of 1050 sq inches of cooking space.”

It was the Gravity Series 1050 Ben was using when I arrived at his home in Brixham – music to my eyes because I soon discovered he had used the mighty device to cook me a full-English breakfast.

So there you go. Forget the kind of smoke and mirrors which those alchemists known as pit-masters insist you must acquire if you wish to serve perfect barbecue food. It always was going to be the case that someone, somewhere would make the art of cooking with smoke and flame a great deal more simple – and, as this particular food writer has discovered, it was happening not in a Neandertha­l cave but in a garden in Brixham.

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 ??  ?? Masterbuil­t has a range of digital charcoal grills and smokers
Masterbuil­t has a range of digital charcoal grills and smokers

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