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Safe and Tasty Barbeque Grilling

By: SustainLane (View Profile)

Grilling and barbequing is a great pastime to share with family and friends. Yet the parade of different foods cooked across the grill does not create the best quality food. Burnt burgers and partially-cooked chicken occur too many times at those weekend barbeques. If you spend time and money on purchasing high-quality, organic or pasture-raised meat, you want to cook it so it’s safe and healthy. Here’s how.

Safety First

First, familiarize yourself with basic grill safety rules. Second, identify and categorize your grilling candidates into those that need short cook times over direct heat (burgers, steaks) and those that need longer sessions with indirect heat (chicken, most tofu-based grill items). Grill like with like. Then no matter what crazy variety of grill-ables passes your way at your next bbq, everyone can eat with pleasure.

Key Tips for Meat:

  • Use an instant-read thermometer to determine doneness, not a knife.
  • Let meat come to room temperature before cooking (except burgers!).
  • Pre-salt meat to help keep it juicy.
  • Always let meat rest for at least 10 minutes before cutting into it.


Steaks: Cook salted room-temperature steaks over direct heat on a hot grill. It’s good if you can only hold your hand an inch above the grill for about two seconds. The steaks should sizzle immediately. Let them cook until they release from the grill on their own (about four minutes), then turn them over, and cook for another four or five minutes. Remove for a rare steak; otherwise, move steaks to indirect heat and continue cooking until done to taste (moving to indirect heat will inhibit charring and the formation of HCA’s). For a one-inch-thick steak, total cooking time should be eight to nine minutes for rare, ten to eleven for medium rare, eleven to thirteen for medium, and fifteen or more for well. Your thermometer should read 125º for rare, 130-135º for medium-rare, 135-140º for medium, and 155º for well. (Note: insert the thermometer in through the side of the steak to get an accurate reading.)

Burgers: Burgers are the one meat you want to put on the grill when they’re cold. Cold fat takes longer to melt and drip out of the burger, which reduces flare-ups. Cook over direct, medium-high heat until they release, and turn only once. Another note: don’t press on them with a spatula. It’s hard to resist, we know, but all the liquid that squeezes out is what would have made your burger deliciously juicy.

Chicken: Chicken fat likes to flare up, avoid this by grilling chicken over indirect heat.

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