Jonell Galloway
Jonell Galloway
Posted 2 Jul 2009 at 5:00
 

Guest blogger Christina Daub studied at L’Ecole du Cordon Bleu in Paris. She now lives in Washington, D.C. She is a poet, and teaches poetry at George Washington University and other writing workshops around the country.

It’s Independence Day, get out the grill!

summertomatoes

Photo compliments of freedigitalphotos.net

With the fourth of July right around the corner, it’s time to clean the grill and get ready to barbecue. Whether you are using charcoal or gas, Independence Day just wouldn’t be the same without the smell and the sizzle of a big steak wafting through the backyard.

For my tastebuds, however, nothing beats the old-fashioned, three-legged charcoal grill, whose heat has been reduced nearly to embers and tinged with hickory chips I’ve soaked to add that delicious smoky flavor that enhances grilled food so well. Unfortunately, in Switzerland, unless you have a personal source of wood chips, you’ll have to use regular charbon de bois, or wood charcoal, which is usually a mixture of several different woods.

To get juicy, flavorful steaks, try slathering each side with mustard, Worcestershire sauce and soy, then let the meat sit while the charcoal reduces itself for slow cooking.

When grilling ribs (the pork variety), soak your wood chips in apple juice for about 30 minutes, then wrap them in foil, perforate it, and lay it on the coals. This gives a slightly sweet taste to the ribs which complements the saltiness of the pork.

Traditional or healthy accompaniments?

While the kids line up for hot dogs (in the Lake Geneva region, local pork butchers or charcuteries often make their own homemade frankfurters) and hamburgers (get the butcher to grind it for you fresh on the morning of the 4th), think about what you want to serve with your grilled delicacies.

Traditionally, there was potato salad, great lumps or cubes of potatoes swamped in mayonnaise, with perhaps a scallion or two to give it some punch. However, not being a fan of such cholesterol- and fat-filled fare, I have always opted for the healthier green salad, loaded with a variety of lettuces and pea shoots I can get by hitting the farmers’ market early enough. In Switzerland, there is an endless choice of greens, herbs and shoots at this time of year in any farmers’ market you go to.

A platter of just-cut, ripe red tomatoes (local if you can find them), sprinkled with salt and drizzled with high quality olive oil and a local full bodied red wine round out the meal. Until  dessert.

Dessert: a healthier version than in the old days

usflagcake

Photo used with authorization of Christine Koh

I have to say while the all-American barbecue meal totally sates me, I never pass up dessert, and this is one time of the year it’s really fun to use color in making dessert. There are a number of red, white and blue desserts I’ve come up with in the past, but everyone’s favorite seems to be what I call the “flag cake.”

This is a flat rectangular sheet cake that I cover either in white icing or whipped cream. On top, I create horizontal rows of raspberries for the red stripes of the flag and in the left corner, I intersperse blueberries so that the icing can shine through as “stars.”

For a lighter, but equally festive dessert, I layer yogurt with berries in parfait glasses, alternating the raspberries (you can also use strawberries or currants) with the blueberries in between the layers of yogurt. The kids seem to prefer vanilla yogurt, but for the adults I use plain, sweetened with a bit of honey.

Let the fireworks begin!

Photos compliments of Christine Koh and freedigitalphotos.net.

Posted by :: Jonell Galloway on 2 July 2009 at 5:00 | permalink
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News story, GenevaLunch, 2 July 2009.

Filed under: Food and health, Foodie news and events, MarketDay - Seasonal products, Recipes

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5 Responses to “July 4th barbecue, new and improved”

  1. Ellen Wallace Says:

    We have a running debate at our house about how to keep hamburgers from falling apart and then falling into the charcoal. What’s the secret to keeping grilled hamburgers in one piece, especially at that critical flipping point?

  2. Rob Bennett Says:

    To keep your hamburgers together when you grill them, you need to mix a binding agent into the meat. So take some bread, remove crust, soak in milk, and then knead it all together with the hamburger. Add some grill spices to the mix, knead it some more, and then form your patties (roll a chunk of the mix into a ball and then flatten the ball).

    This should do the trick.

  3. Ellen Wallace Says:

    Hmmm, I think I win the debate at our place! We always used a bit of oatmeal at home, with a touch of catsup and mustard and egg, worcestershire to bind.

  4. Christina Daub Says:

    You don’t need a binding agent when shaping your meat patties into baseballs or softballs or if using the griddle which I do as an indoor alternative. However, for the grill, depending on how thin you make your hamburger patties, you may need to add bread crumbs or as my mother used to do, a raw egg mixed well into each pound/half kilo of ground meat. I prefer only to add salt and pepper to my ground meat, mixed in well, rolled into a ball and “rolled” around on the grill instead of flipped. It will flatten quite a bit during this process. Also, the less fat content of the meat, the more likely it is to fall apart and the more you will need to bind it.

  5. Ellen Wallace Says:

    Christina, I think you’ve just hit on something that is a problem for Americans in Europe: the ground beef is leaner, as a rule. I remember moving from the US to Paris and shopping with friends who bought ground beef and then added butter to it, which horrified me. But their hamburgers were definitely better for it, and I suspect the meat was still lower in fat than the ground beef we had in Iowa, where I grew up, and which made terrific grilled hamburgers! With fresh corn on the cob and big juicy garden tomatoes, mmmmm.

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