Pre cook your food

Rivershot

Senior Member
in the microwave and wrap in foil before you put it on the grill, to avoid any charring or burning or fat dripping on the coals. :whip::whip::whip::whip:
This is some of the funniest stuff I have read in a long time. I guess I'll sell my cookers when the S&S opens and get some of those new backyard Microwave steamers.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/07/02/how.make.grilling.safe/index.html?hpt=Sbin
When the dog days hit Boston, Massachusetts, Stephanie Meyers starts cooking alfresco to keep things cool indoors.

Meyers grills--a lot--and as a nutritionist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, she's well aware that charring meat over an open flame produces cancer-causing substances (known as carcinogens) that may be harmful when eaten. So to make grilling healthier, she sticks to the same advice she gives her patients.

"I follow my own tips and grill a lot of veggies," she says. "I've been known to put all kinds of things on the grill just to see what happens." (She's not kidding: Plums, kale and Swiss chard are among some of her favorite past experiments.)

Unlike meat, vegetables don't create carcinogens when they char. But the small cancer risk associated with grilling meat isn't so great that you need to forgo hamburgers, hot dogs and steaks altogether. Taking a few precautions while barbecuing will minimize the health risks without sacrificing that delicious charcoal taste, experts say.

Health.com: 15 Healthy Grilled Chicken Recipes

Grilling protein-filled foods such as meat and fish creates two kinds of chemical compounds that may contribute to cancer: heterocyclic amines (HCAs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).

HCAs form in meat when it's cooked at a high temperature. While frying and broiling produce these chemicals as well, those charred bits at the edges of barbecued meat contain HCAs in their purest state. HCAs, which are also found in cigarette smoke, have been shown to cause cancer in organs including the stomach, colon, liver and skin--but only in animal studies.

It's unclear whether HCAs cause the same problems in people. Still, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has stated that the chemicals are "reasonably anticipated to be human carcinogens."

Health.com: Ways to Breathe Easier When Eating

PAHs, the second type of compound, are formed when juices from meat drip onto coals or other hot surfaces and create smoke. The smoke contains these carcinogens, which are deposited onto the surface of meat as it swirls around the food.

Colleen Doyle, the director of nutrition and physical activity for the American Cancer Society, says the risks these two substances pose shouldn't make die-hard grillers put away their oversized utensils for good. "From our perspective, there has not been enough definitive research that would cause us to tell people not to grill at all," she says.

But there are ways to minimize your exposure to carcinogens when grilling, Doyle adds. She recommends cleaning the grill prior to cooking, which will remove any charred debris that may stick to food. And if some parts of the meat you're cooking get badly charred, cut those pieces off.

Health.com: The Best Healthy Burger Recipes

In addition, precooking food slightly before grilling will help cut down on PAHs. Meyers recommends placing meat in the microwave and zapping it for between 60 seconds (for leaner cuts) and 90 seconds (for thicker, fattier pieces). This reduces the amount of time the food is on the grill and allows some of the juices to drain beforehand.

Certain recipes can make grilling safer as well, according to Meyers. Marinades made with vinegar or lemon act as an "invisible shield" that changes the acidity of the meat and prevents PAHs from sticking, she says. (On the other hand, sugary marinades such as barbecue sauce that encourage charring should be used only during the last one to two minutes on the grill.)

And whenever possible, Meyers recommends grilling vegetables or fruits instead of meat.

The carcinogens in charred meat aren't the only health concern associated with barbecues. Though for many people the smell of a juicy steak wafting from the grill is synonymous with the onset of summer, the smoke that carries the aroma is less desirable.

Health.com: How to Pair Wine With Grilled Food

A 2003 report from researchers at Rice University, in Houston, Texas, found that grilling creates "ambient fine particulate matter"--air pollution, in other words. Although backyard barbecues add far less pollution to the atmosphere than cars and factories, this particulate matter can still cause problems. In concentrated amounts, the smoke from a grill can trigger respiratory trouble in people with lung diseases such as asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

"Anyone who is sensitive to smoke should avoid exposure to a grill--or fire, or trucks," says Paul Billings, the vice president of advocacy at the American Lung Association. "They should protect themselves by limiting their exposure to whatever the source is that irritates their lungs."

Billings recommends cooking over natural gas or propane grills to reduce the pollution emitted. If you own a charcoal grill, using a chimney starter instead of lighter fluid will also keep you from inhaling harmful chemicals, he says.

Buying lean cuts of meat, trimming off most of the fat and wrapping foods like fish in a foil packet will all help cut down on smoke by reducing the amount of juices that drip onto the grill.

Health.com: 9 Mouthwatering Barbecue Recipes

Although at-home chefs should always try to grill as safely as possible, Meyers emphasizes that you shouldn't let the health risks of barbecuing spoil your appetite.

"Keep the risk in perspective," she says. "Grilled foods are not the greatest cancer risk--not wearing sunscreen while at the grill is a bigger deal. If you like to grill, put meat on the grill and use the safety tips."
 

Fletch_W

Banned
If there are no 5 year olds in the room when someone uses the word "veggie" , you know you are talking to an idiot.
 
We all got to die of something sometime.

I can stand being killed by a jealous husband or eating too much well cooked steak or bbg.

I have it on good authority (mine) that alcohol dissolves those nasty HCA's, and converts them to methane gas.
 

fishnpreacher

Senior Member
Die young, it makes for a prettier corpse........

Count me in..........;)
 

sinclair1

Senior Member
:banginghe I could not finish reading the story. I stopped at picking a wine for grilling.
 

Ole Fuzzy

Banned
The interviewee is "a nutritionist."

Ask an MD or a licensed/registered dietician what they think about "nutritionists." A lot of hacks can call themselves a nutritionist.

They'd just as well be interviewing Bigsteve.
 

Paymaster

Old Worn Out Mod
Staff member
Micro wave! I just as sooned eat boiled ribs or crock potted Q!:rofl::rofl::rofl:
 

Garcia Mitchler

Senior Member
:biggrin2: I'd rather eat good, die younger, than drooling on myself for years at the home... so I'm gonna INCREASE my BBQ'ing :biggrin2:
 

sjbl62

Senior Member
If there are no 5 year olds in the room when someone uses the word "veggie" , you know you are talking to an idiot.

I really didn't have anything to say about or add to this, it just needs to repeated several times.
 

Born2Trade

Senior Member
Found this dated July 3rd 2007

Print ShareThisWhat would a Fourth of July celebration be without a traditional barbecue? Americans love affair with cooking on an outdoor charcoal grill developed as Americans moved west.

So this Wednesday, as you reach for a piece of our national heritage, should you also be worried that your grilled meats may contain carcinogens?

The subject of carcinogens and grilling, according to Steven Raichlen, has been blown out of proportion. Raichlen, author of The Barbecue Bible and How To Grill, is also host of the long running PBS series, “Barbecue University.”

“The problem is way, way, way, way overstated,” he said. “It’s been put to me that if you eat 200 charcoal grilled steaks back-to-back, you increase your risk of getting cancer by one in a million. It’s the same as getting an X-ray in a doctor’s office increases your chance of getting cancer by one in a million, and turning 60 increases your chance of cancer by one in a million.”

The first culprit in the great carcinogen debate is the smoke that arises when fat and meat juices fall onto the flames. This smoke contains carcinogenic substances called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The theory is that the PAH-filled smoke coats the food, which we in turn eat.The second type of carcinogen, heterocyclic amines (HCAs), develops in meat that is cooked over high heat. These substances are the byproduct of the heat-induced chemical reaction between the meat’s amino acids and the creatine found in its muscle tissue.

But Raichlen doesn’t believe there is much to worry about.

“The grilling of meats is part of what made it possible for us to make the leap from hominid (early humans) to the modern, sentient, thinking, socialized beings we are today,” he said. “There have been studies at Harvard that show that pre-grilling hominids had big jaws, big teeth and small brains. Once they started grilling meat, they had smaller jaws and teeth and bigger brains. If grilling were consistently bad, we wouldn’t be here as a species.”

VideoBetter Barbecue
Raichlen offers this advice for grillers who may be concerned:

— Use indirect grilling – This technique works for both charcoal and gas grills. When using gas, light one side on high and grill the meat on the opposite side. On a charcoal grill, rake the charcoal in mounds at three o’clock and nine o’clock and grill the meat in the center.

— Buy leaner meats – Raichlen isn’t advocating passing up that well-marbled steak. What he is saying is that to trim excess fat that may cause flare-ups, without sacrificing flavor.

— Grill more vegetables and fish –carcinogens are not associated with these food items.

— Learn the difference between grilling and burning – “The goal of grilling is to turn the meat golden brown, not black,” said Raichlen.

The Hearth, Patio & Barbecue Association agrees that trimming excess fat from meat to help prevent grill flare-ups is a good idea. It also suggests lining the grill’s cooking surface with punctured aluminum foil, or using cedar planks to protect against flare-ups and charring.

Here are some other tips the association recommends:

— Turn food often with tongs to prevent charring.

— Do not press, flatten or pierce the meat. It will cause flavorful juices to be lost and may cause flare-ups.

— Use proper cooking temperatures: An internal temperature of 165 for poultry; 160 degrees for ground beef and pork; 150 degrees for large-cut pork roasts; and 145 degrees for beef roasts, steaks, seafood and lamb.
 

Born2Trade

Senior Member
The problem is way, way, way, way overstated,” he said. “It’s been put to me that if you eat 200 charcoal grilled steaks back-to-back, you increase your risk of getting cancer by one in a million. It’s the same as getting an X-ray in a doctor’s office increases your chance of getting cancer by one in a million, and turning 60 increases your chance of cancer by one in a million.”
 

Rivershot

Senior Member
I put a Brisket on the Egg a little while ago, gotta use it before Obama Care outlaws it or puts a sin tax on it.
 

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