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On May 23, 10:24*am, HK wrote:
BAR wrote: wrote: On May 23, 8:51 am, Richard Casady wrote: On Wed, 20 May 2009 16:29:53 -0400, HK wrote: I don't think the smell and taste of charcoal adds much to the taste of properly prepared food. I don't think charcoal has any smell or taste to impart, especially since, when the food arrives, it is red hot and anything volatile is long gone. Those little reddish flames you see are carbon monoxide. Of course if you use lighter fluid and don't wait for it to burn off, you deserve whatever you get. Casady You are thinking wrong then. Charcoal is wood. Nothing but charred wood. The flavor it imparts is smoke. That's the whole idea. I don't use lighter fluid. If I were going to cook with gas, I've got a perfectly good gas stove in my kitchen. He's flown over it once or twice, shouldn't that count. I fished the Florida Everglades once 20 years ago, I should be a guide. Ever google up the connections between charcoal grilling of meats and...cancer? Interesting reading. Well, I was a bad boy once this past week...we did eat breakfast at a Waffle House, which we do about once a year. Great stuff, but it surely pegs anyone's cholesterol meter. Best restaurant we encountered in Vero Beach area was a small Cuban restaurant. So good, we ate dinner there twice.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Psssst......dummy, if you read the studies, you'll find out that chances of getting cancer from charcoal or wood is just about the same as grilling with gas. It does the same thing. Juices from the meat hit the burner, making smoke. |
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