Saturday, November 2, 2013

The Various Ways Of Grilling Pork

By Hedrick Lepsch


Every summer, backyards across the nation see amateur grill masters fire up their grills and go to work slathering their favorite cut of meat with their best bbq sauce. But with all of the fun that can be backyard grilling, it is still vitally important for a family and that amateur grill master to remember safety at all times.

The first step that a person with a new grill can do to ensure their personal safety and the safety of their family and possessions is to read the owner's manual of the grill. Even if one has owned the grill for years but has never read the manual, this important step of reading the manual and learning how to safely operate the grill will be a critical step in one's safety while grilling.

Grilling safety is, or at least should be, a vital step in having a fun and safe summer meal outdoors. Safely grilling involves multiple points of awareness, but the first and main safety concern for grilling safety should be fire safety. Fire safety while grilling can be accomplished much in the same way as cooking safely within the home. Just as one would not leave a hot stove top on, or leave food cooking on the stove or in the oven without supervision, so too should a person who is grilling food outside remain with the food at all times while it is being cooked.

One of the first things that the owner's manual is likely to say is that the grill is intended for outside use only, as almost all grills are. Using grills indoors can promote hazardous situations including the increased risk of fire danger, smoke inhalation, and carbon monoxide poisoning.

Unlike the kitchen, a grill operates on charcoal or gas lines that feed directly into the grill and therefore will require additional knowledge and safety precautions to operate. Also, because the food on the grill in usually placed directly over the heat source, the chances of a grease fire are grater on an outside grill than they are in the kitchen.

Discovering the perfect balance of ingredients for sauce-regardless of what the ingredients are-is what takes the most time in perfecting barbeque. Whether you cook it in a pit for the day or throw the cut on the grill in your back yard, seasoning the meat right is what will make your cooking stand out from all the rest.

Grilling in an open outdoor area with good ventilation will limit and all but eradicate the danger from carbon monoxide or other harmful smoke components. Likewise, grilling outdoors will limit the threat of fire to the home that grills can often create.

One can prevent fires in their home due to a grilling accident by ensuring that the grill is outside, on nonflammable surroundings such as a brick or cement patio, and is on a stable foundation. Having the grill itself be stable is an important aspect to grilling safety.

Remembering fire safety while manning a gas grill is equally as important as when a person is using a charcoal grill. Gas fueled grills will require a person to be knowledgeable about how to use their gas canister or tank, how to operate the controls of the grill, and how to clear the lines of any clogs should something become lodged in the gas lines.

With these safety tips in mind, a family can enjoy their best bbq sauce, baby back ribs, sizzling steaks, and other grilling favorites all while keeping safe. And a safe day grilling is always the best day grilling.




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