Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Beef up your grill’s heat

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GRILLING with lump charcoal instead of briquettes is a bit like driving a stick shift rather than an automatic: Both will get you where you’re going, but lump is seen as the more pure experience. Unlike many briquettes, lumps of carbonised wood contain no accelerant­s or substances such as borax, which can affect taste.

Heat check: Although some briquettes can top out at about 1,000F, lump charcoal can burn as hot as 1,400F.

This is mostly because lump’s irregular shape allows for more airflow.

Where to get it: Rockwood, based in St. Louis, was started when founder Jonathan Heslop spotted a charcoal plant while working as a medevac pilot. The company makes lump charcoal from Missouri maple, oak, and hickory.

The combinatio­n lends food a distinct but not overpoweri­ng taste. US$23 for 10 lbs

The extreme upgrade

Pound for pound, good binchotan likely costs more than whatever you’re cooking over it.

Known for providing smokeless, infernal heat, the Japanese charcoal is perfectly suited to cooking yakitori, and other similar-style skewers, to a burnished brown without drying them out.

The oversize firestarte­r

For classic backyard fare—hot dogs, hamburgers, chicken—briquettes are the grilling fuel most people turn to. But not all are created equal: Some big briquettes can be twice the size of typical hardware-store versions, with a longer burn time.

Heat check: Briquettes provide more con

sistent heat than lump, so while they may not get quite as hot, they’ll keep you cooking all afternoon.

Where to get it: Jealous Devil’s Max XL briquettes are made with quebracho hardwood and a little vegetable starch as a binder—no chemicals or accelerant­s. US$32 for 20 lbs

For pellet grill owners

Once you start using a pellet grill, it’s easy to get so taken with the time and temperatur­e controls that you lose sight of the fundamenta­ls: You’re still cooking with wood, and the

type of wood matters.

For Central Texas-style barbecue (hello, brisket!), there’s only one real choice: post oak. Heat check: Temperatur­es top out at around 1,400F, perfect for searing steaks and skewers.

Where to get it: Prime 6 packs a lot of cooking power into a small package.

The company says 1 lb will burn as long as 3 lbs of lump charcoal and can be extinguish­ed and relit up to seven times.

Made from hardwood waste sawdust that’s compressed into hollow hexagonal logs, they’re then carbonised into charcoal. — Bloomberg.

 ??  ?? There are several ways to beef up your barbecue grill’s heat
There are several ways to beef up your barbecue grill’s heat

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