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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Sheldon wrote on 05 Jun 2006 in rec.food.cooking
> Then why not toss your grill in the trash... I mean like in just Noo > Joisey alone every summer some 30 gazillion perfectly acceptible > steaks, burgers, and weenies are cooked on grills, WITHOUT pans... but > according to brainless CONVICTED FELONS like you that method sucks. > LURKER TROUBLEMAKER... EskWIRED is a known CHILD MOLESTER... may the > gods of terminal illness visit upon you... DIE, you dirtbag! > > Sheldon > > grilling...rotisserrieing ...different things. When grilling no pan is required...due to the speed of cooking and the heat of the fire. rotissierrie the fire is less intense and the cooking time is longer...Allowing more juices to drip. If there isn't a pan to collect these juices or a fire hot enough to deal with them...They collect in all the nooks and crannies allowing for grease fire surprise next time you grill at a high temp. -- -Alan |
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Sheldon wrote:
> > EskWIRED@CHILDMOLESTER wrote: >> >> While the tastiest grilling is done using hardwood embers, I'd still >> rather eat food cooked with a calrod on the side, rather than food bathed >> in the vapors of partially burnt grease, as advocated by Sheldon. > > Then why not toss your grill in the trash... I mean like in just Noo > Joisey alone every summer some 30 gazillion perfectly acceptible > steaks, burgers, and weenies are cooked on grills, WITHOUT pans... but > according to brainless CONVICTED FELONS like you that method sucks. > LURKER TROUBLEMAKER... EskWIRED is a known CHILD MOLESTER... may the > gods of terminal illness visit upon you... DIE, you dirtbag! > > Sheldon > wait...did you ascertain his criminal behavior based on his disagreement on grilling methods or are you privvy to some super secret info? Can I accuse you of international espionage because we disagree on whether or not you can serve cheese and fish in the same 24 hour period? I mean I'm just wondering? Because if we use your method I think this place would become way way more interesting. -- ..:Heather:. www.velvet-c.com Step off, beyotches, I'm the roflpimp! |
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jay wrote:
> On Mon, 05 Jun 2006 20:11:22 +0000, EskWIRED wrote: > > > In rec.food.cooking, jay > wrote: > > > >> Grilling, BBQ..ing, and smoking are all different cooking methods. > When >> you use the electric element on a gas grill for rotisserie > cooking, you >> are actually using your grill as an oven. > > > > Naw. In an oven, you cook with convection. > > Webster on line > Main Entry: convection oven > Function: noun > : an oven having a fan that circulates hot air uniformly and > continuously : around food > > I don't own a convection oven or a fan. You looked up the wrong thing: Main Entry: con·vec·tion Pronunciation: k&n-'vek-sh&n Function: noun Etymology: Late Latin convection-, convectio, from Latin convehere to bring together, from com- + vehere to carry -- more at WAY 1 : the action or process of conveying 2 a : the circulatory motion that occurs in a fluid at a nonuniform temperature owing to the variation of its density and the action of gravity b : the transfer of heat by convection -- compare CONDUCTION, RADIATION - con·vec·tion·al /-shn&l, -sh&-n&l/ adjective The main heating mechanism in the ANY oven is convection, unless you use a stone (conduction) or broiler (radiation). Brian -- If televison's a babysitter, the Internet is a drunk librarian who won't shut up. -- Dorothy Gambrell (http://catandgirl.com) |
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![]() Sheldon wrote: > Rfc is becoming pretty dull of late too, it's hardly about food > anymore and what little occurs is infantile claptrap. Then leave. --Blair "Solve that problem both ways." |
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In rec.food.cooking, Sheldon > wrote:
> EskWIRED@CHILDMOLESTER wrote: > > > > While the tastiest grilling is done using hardwood embers, I'd still > > rather eat food cooked with a calrod on the side, rather than food bathed > > in the vapors of partially burnt grease, as advocated by Sheldon. > Then why not toss your grill in the trash... Because the food I grill over hardwood embers tastes so good? I mean like in just Noo > Joisey alone every summer some 30 gazillion perfectly acceptible > steaks, burgers, and weenies are cooked on grills, WITHOUT pans... "Perfectly acceptable" is damn faint praise. "The best I've ever had" or "I can't believe how good this is" or "How do you DO this?" are the kinds of comments I prefer. Seldom does one hear such things when serving food cooked over gas flames and burning (or smoking) grease. but > according to brainless CONVICTED FELONS like you Convicted felon? Where do you get that shit? I've never ever even been arested. > that method sucks. Naw. It doesn't suck. Its a mediocre convenience-based method. It doesn't suck any more than drip coffee sucks. But once you get used to the good stuff, its hard to take those who enthuse about mediocrity seriously. > LURKER TROUBLEMAKER... EskWIRED is a known CHILD MOLESTER... may the > gods of terminal illness visit upon you... DIE, you dirtbag! Where do you get this shit? Felon? Child molester? You going off the edge just because you can't admit your beloved Weber is a mediocre tool? Here's a suggestion: Try some good meat grilled over hardwood. Then try some grilled over smoking grease. Tell me what you learn. -- A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. --Edward R. Murrow |
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In rec.food.cooking, jay > wrote:
> On Mon, 05 Jun 2006 20:11:22 +0000, EskWIRED wrote: > > In rec.food.cooking, jay > wrote: > > > >> Grilling, BBQ..ing, and smoking are all different cooking methods. When > >> you use the electric element on a gas grill for rotisserie cooking, you > >> are actually using your grill as an oven. > > > > Naw. In an oven, you cook with convection. > Webster on line > Main Entry: convection oven > Function: noun > : an oven having a fan that circulates hot air uniformly and continuously > : around food > I don't own a convection oven or a fan. I'm not referring to the coloquial (and somewhat *******ized) use of "convection oven". I'm referring to the method of transferring heat via convection (as opposed to radiation and conduction, the two other methods). Hot air, in any oven, heats the food using convection. Grills use a combination of conduction from the hot metal and radiation from the glowing coals. That's why I said that the "side burner" is closer to grilling than oven cooking: It uses radiant heat instead of convection. > > > It is closer to grilling over red hot embers than it is to using hot air > > to do the job, like in an oven. > > > > While the tastiest grilling is done using hardwood embers, I'd still > > rather eat food cooked with a calrod on the side, rather than food bathed > > in the vapors of partially burnt grease, as advocated by Sheldon. > > Like I said "Grilling, BBQ..ing, and smoking are all different cooking > methods." > I never disagreed (so long as by "smoking" you mean "cold smoking" which is not technically a means of cooking). If not, what is the difference between BBQing and smoking in your mind? > >> I use my gas grill as an oven quite often. It is connected to the > >> natural gas source so no schlepping of LP. Chicken/whatever on one > >> side, fire on the other. Works great. > > > > Why not just use your oven? > My gas grill is outside and it does not heat up the inside of the house, > and sometimes I am outside and choose to cook outside. A tin box heated > by whatever including the sun can be an oven. Fair enough. > Webster on line > Main Entry: ov?en > Pronunciation: '&-v&n > Function: noun > Etymology: Middle English, from Old English ofen; akin to Old High German ofan > oven and perhaps to Greek ipnos oven > : a chamber used for baking, heating, or drying. > I hope this helped. Look up "convection" on Wikipedia. There's some relevant stuff there. And again, in your mind, what is the distinction between BBQing and smoking? -- A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. --Edward R. Murrow |
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In rec.food.cooking, Default User > wrote:
> jay wrote: > > On Mon, 05 Jun 2006 20:11:22 +0000, EskWIRED wrote: > > > > > In rec.food.cooking, jay > wrote: > > > > > >> Grilling, BBQ..ing, and smoking are all different cooking methods. > > When >> you use the electric element on a gas grill for rotisserie > > cooking, you >> are actually using your grill as an oven. > > > > > > Naw. In an oven, you cook with convection. > > > > Webster on line > > Main Entry: convection oven > > Function: noun > > : an oven having a fan that circulates hot air uniformly and > > continuously : around food > > > > I don't own a convection oven or a fan. > You looked up the wrong thing: > Main Entry: con?vec?tion > Pronunciation: k&n-'vek-sh&n > Function: noun > Etymology: Late Latin convection-, convectio, from Latin convehere to > bring together, from com- + vehere to carry -- more at WAY > 1 : the action or process of conveying > 2 a : the circulatory motion that occurs in a fluid at a nonuniform > temperature owing to the variation of its density and the action of > gravity b : the transfer of heat by convection -- compare CONDUCTION, > RADIATION > - con?vec?tion?al /-shn&l, -sh&-n&l/ adjective > The main heating mechanism in the ANY oven is convection, unless you > use a stone (conduction) or broiler (radiation). Right. You knew what I meant exactly. One might argue that the air which touches the burner is heated by conduction, while the rest of the air is heated by convection, and that the air, in turn, heats the meat by conduction, but that would be hyper-technical to the point of being silly. Generally, all ovens heat the food using convection, and the ones with a fan are "forced convection". -- A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. --Edward R. Murrow |
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