"This picture illustrates our attempts at making the jerk sauce that we used to marinate vegetables before we roasted them, for our jerk-roasted vegetables side dish. We found a recipe for jerk sauce here, and after doubling it, followed it religiously. (Missing labels in the picture: thyme, black pepper, lime, rum; this picture was taken before we added those ingredients.) Of course, it was INSANELY spicy, just incredibly, painfully, spicy. And we had a whole blender full of it. So we bought some yogurt and mixed spoonfuls of the sauce into a much larger proportion of yogurt, and added some oil, and salt, and then used that sauce to marinate sweet potatoes, parsnips, onions, and regular potatoes. Once we toned down the insane heat, the sauce was pretty delicious; with so many scallions, it was bound to be good. I would recommend NOT doubling the recipe, perhaps adding a little oil to the ingredients before blending, and then mixing the blended paste with yogurt, because the paste will still be spicy. But if you store the paste in a separate container, and mix small quantities with yogurt when needed, youve got yourself a handy supply of very good marinade."
Do the anti-oxidants from the sauces off-set the damage from the blackened and charred parts of the meat? I remember reading that the burnt parts have something harmful in them, but I don’t recall what.
We barbecue a lot, with old-fashioned charcoal.
FR BBQ Ping - let’s fire ‘em up!
Who gives a damn if bbqing is good for you or not.
Kill it and Grill it.
Gator on the grill is awesome.
Link?
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