doozer
Matthew 6:2
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2006
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also, try a peppercorn.
I've never waited either. Even reached a point nowadays where i eat my salad while i let it cook. I think it's at it's juiciest and most correctly cooked right off the grill.
Obviously a steakhouse is different from a fish house but do you (or anyone else) have any ideas for grilling fish? I typically just use lemon pepper on salmon, but salmon is getting so expensive and "fresh" talapia and other white fishes aren't so fresh once they reach E. Tenn and therefore don't have as much flavor as I'd like.
Just go catch some crappie or sauger, fillet them and bam you have something better than talapia.
If you'd like and if you're coming to the O&W game, I can try and give you some fresh fillets.
Lay out some aluminum foil on the grill. Salt, pepper and lemon juice on those puppies. Cook until they're done. Best fish you'll ever eat.
Doesn't that turn the dry rub into a liquid marinade?i also recommend brushing both sides of the steak with vegetable/olive oil before applying your seasoning of choice.
Doesn't that turn the dry rub into a liquid marinade?...to each his own, personally a good cut of meat IMO only needs a touch of sea salt and the smoke of the charcoal (gas sux). I did recently try A1's Chicogo Style Marinade on a lower quality ribeye (black pepercorn and dried red bell pepper are the main ingredients) that turned out well.
Doesn't that turn the dry rub into a liquid marinade?...to each his own, personally a good cut of meat IMO only needs a touch of sea salt and the smoke of the charcoal (gas sux). I did recently try A1's Chicogo Style Marinade on a lower quality ribeye (black pepercorn and dried red bell pepper are the main ingredients) that turned out well.
