11 Lessons My Grill Taught Me in 2021

Buying a Weber Kettle charcoal grill is one of the best decisions I made in 2021. Up until this year, I had been wary of this seemingly dad-dominated community of cookers, but I should have known better: All of my nicest readers are dads.

With my Weber, I smoked a little, grilled a lot, and learned even more—and I’d like to share my favorite dishes (and lessons) with you now, in no particular order. This is what my grill taught me over the past year.

What do you think so far?

Sometimes meat is the best teacher a grilling girl can ask for:

The steak helped me get a grasp on what really hot coals look and act like, and the chicken made the importance of two-zone grilling click into place. If you’re also a brand new grill baby, I highly recommend both meats as a good starting point for your own grill journey.

This was by far the most intimidating and rewarding thing I cooked all year. Smoking a pork shoulder not only yielded some very delicious BBQ, it made me “get” why dads find the act of smoking so fulfilling:

My first piece of advice? Don’t be intimidated. Though smoking can seem kind of complicated at first, smoking a pork shoulder is one of the easier large-format meat projects you can take on, even on a simple charcoal grill. It’s a forgiving cut that’s hard to dry out, thanks to a large amount of intramuscular fat. I’m sure you could dry it out if you completely ignored the next 2ooo or so words, but you’re not going to do that. You’re going to do just fine.

Simply put—These were the best frozen pizzas I’ve ever had:

Grilled, frozen pizza has all the makings of an easy but oddly special-feeling weeknight supper. You can grill multiple pizzas, one at a time, and eat the first at a leisurely clip while the next one is cooking. Grilling a pizza from frozen to hot and crisp takes all of 20 minutes, and the pre-heat time is markedly shorter than your oven’s.

Making a good grilled pizza is all about preparation. Once you master that, it’s as easy as (pizza) pie:

Grilling a pizza can be slightly stressful if you’ve never made one before. The best grilled pizzas are made with a very hot grill, and pizza dough browns quite quickly. But just as I am no longer allowing the HBO show “Girls” to deter me from enjoying pizzas hot and fresh from the grill, you are not going to let fear deter you. Adopt a few good pizza grilling habits now, and you will be rewarded with beautiful grilled pizzas for years to come.

This blog made my sister very angry, but she’s a comic book historian, not a food writer, so her opinion doesn’t matter as much as mine (and my opinion is that grilled cucumbers rule):

Cooked ‘cumbers are surprisingly sweet and fragrant, with a heady aroma that’s akin, but not identical to, a zucchini’s. Thanks to their extremely high moisture content, they stay firm over high heat, giving you a spear with a crisp, juicy interior and deeply flavorful exterior. I like grilled cucumbers far more than I was prepared to, is what I’m saying.

After successfully grilling some cukes, I decided to take it further and grill a pickle (okay, many pickles):

Grilled pickles are to grilled cucumbers as corned beef is to smoked brisket—they both benefit from smoky heat of my Weber, but only one of them is brined. But unlike brisket—corned or not—grilled pickles can be prepared in a matter of minutes.

Salt works quite differently from other seasonings, and it should be treated differently:

Unlike salt, a dry rub is meant to sit on the surface of the meat and create a crust of complementary flavors, and it should be applied right before your protein goes in your smoker or on your grill. Their ingredients vary wildly, but most rubs are comprised of a mixture of herbs, spices, chilis, and sugar. The flavor-containing chemical compounds in these ingredients are much larger than sodium chloride, and they cannot penetrate deep into the meat.

Cooking a bunch of individual steaks to varying degrees of doneness is no fun at all, but you don’t have to do that:

If you want a large amount of meat all cooked to the same end point, you can cut the teardrop-shaped piece of steak into two pieces and cook each one to the desired temperature; but if your particular group of eaters can’t agree on what that perfect end point is, you can capitalize on the steak’s uneven shape and cook it all at once for a platter of meat that has everything from rare to medium-well.

A board sauce can salvage an overcooked steak, but you don’t have to overcook anything to avail yourself of its magic:

A board dressing is exactly what it sounds like: It’s a dressing that’s made right on the cutting board. You take some olive oil, you take some fresh herbs, and you take some garlic. You chop up the latter two and mix them with the oil in a coffee cup. When your steak is done cooking (whether on the grill or in the pan), you pour the contents of the mug on a cutting board, place the—

hot, un

rest

ed

—steak in that delicious mess, and slice and toss it, mixing the oil with the meat’s juices to create an immensely flavorful sauce. It works really well on large-format steaks, particularly flank and skirt, but you can use it on pork, lamb, and even shrimp (which don’t need to be sliced, just tossed).

This Thanksgiving, I smoked my turkey the “wrong” way, and everyone was delighted with it:

In my house, I am the dad and the mom, the host and the hostess, the feminine and the masculine. I am going to be the one doing the smoking on Thanksgiving day, but I am

also

the one who will be doing nearly everything else. My stepmom and a few friends will be bringing side dishes, but the men in my life are useless when it comes to cooking of any kind, and cannot be trusted with something as important as the turkey (or the mashed potatoes, or the dressing, or anything other than rearranging furniture and refilling my beverage). I wanted to set myself up for success, with a turkey that could be left alone for nearly the entire cook, without having to worry about the grill getting too hot or the meat drying out.

  

Claire is Lifehacker's Senior Food Editor. She has a B.S. in chemistry, a decade of food journalism experience, and a deep love for mayonnaise and MSG.

Comments on "11 Lessons My Grill Taught Me in 2021" :

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

There's No Shame in a Cookie Crumb Crust
Cooking

There's No Shame in a Cookie Crumb Crust

When I was in college, I got into baking as a way to mitigate the stress brought on by taking classe...

Read More →
Make Rounder, Prettier Truffles With a Melon Baller
Cooking

Make Rounder, Prettier Truffles With a Melon Baller

Chocolate truffles are the cheeseball of the dessert world: high-impact, low-effort, and they never ...

Read More →
Should You Stir in Circles or Straight Lines?
Cooking

Should You Stir in Circles or Straight Lines?

Many years ago, I saw—or at least I think I saw—an article that claimed stirring a pot of food u...

Read More →
Why You Should Prep Your Garnishes Before You Start Cooking
Cooking

Why You Should Prep Your Garnishes Before You Start Cooking

Let me paint you a picture: You’re cooking breakfast. Today, you’ve decided to make soft scrambl...

Read More →
Do Sprinkles, Food Coloring, and Icing Ever Really Expire?
Cooking

Do Sprinkles, Food Coloring, and Icing Ever Really Expire?

I cleaned out my pantry over the weekend and it led to a lot of existential questions, mostly about ...

Read More →
How to Get Excited About Cooking Again
Cooking

How to Get Excited About Cooking Again

I’m not sure if anyone made resolutions this year. The source of most people’s problems are not ...

Read More →
Buffalo an Entire Chicken for Super Bowl Sunday
Cooking

Buffalo an Entire Chicken for Super Bowl Sunday

I did not grow up watching the Super Bowl. The closest thing my home state of Mississippi has to a p...

Read More →
8 Ways to Add a Little Luck of the Irish to Your St. Patrick's Day Spread
Cooking

8 Ways to Add a Little Luck of the Irish to Your St. Patrick's Day Spread

Tomorrow is March 17, also known as “St. Patrick’s Day,” “St. Paddy’s Day,” and “amate...

Read More →
Eat Caviar Off the Back of Your Hand
Cooking

Eat Caviar Off the Back of Your Hand

A few years ago, I embarked on a dream trip to the South of France, where I took cooking lessons at ...

Read More →