Grilling Glossary for Summer

Hand flipping porkchops on the grill
What’s the word on your grilling skills?

Word has it that it’s National Grilling Month. While the summer entertaining season is just heating up, there is plenty of time to bone up on your grilling terminology. Whether you’re hosting guests around outdoor living spaces or inside your home or making dinner for just the family, grilling techniques can be the star of the show. 

Let’s start with this list of terms that can help you garner the vote for the Best Home Cook at your house!

2-Zone Cooking: using different heat zones to gain more control over the temperature

3-2-1 Ribs: smoking for three hours at a low temperature, wrapping ribs in foil and continuing to cook for another two hours and unwrapping to cook for a final hour at a higher temperature while basting

Bark: outer layer of flavorful, seasoned crust on a brisket or other type of smoked meat

Black and Blue (Pittsburgh):  red meat that’s been grilled to a char on the outside while the inside is still “blue” (very rare)

Blade Tenderizing: thin cuts made in the fiber and connective tissue of otherwise tough cuts of meat to tenderize them

Blue Smoke: smoke is tinged slightly blue due to its heat

Bottle o’ Red: ketchup

Burnt Ends (Meat Candy): crispy, fatty bark pieces of a smoked brisket, usually made from the point end. 

Chimney: lighting a charcoal fire by creating a “chimney” from paper to heat and ignite the charcoal

Cold Smoking: food is infused with a smoky flavor but isn’t cooked and usually done at or below 140°F.

Cowboy Barbecue: cooking over open coals, often with cast-iron cookware

Creosote: carcinogenic substance that can form on the surface of meat if wood isn’t burned properly

Crust: crispy outside layer of barbecued meat

Dalmatian Rub: dry seasoning of salt and black pepper

Danger Zone: temperature range of 41-135°F where microbes are able to grow rapidly

Fat Cap: thick layer of fat between the skin and flesh on some cuts of meat

Fond: browned meat juices, fat and spices that are left at the bottom of the pan after cooking some dishes. (Don’t toss them out! They can add amazing flavor to your dish.)

Holy Trinity: traditional mix of onion, celery and bell peppers

Maillard Reaction: chemical reaction that occurs when protein and sugars in food cooked over high heat produce new flavors, aromas and colors

Planking: meat or seafood is placed on a thin piece of wood that was soaked in water to create steam and smoke when heated to add flavor

Reverse Sear: meat is cooked over a low heat and finished by searing over a high, direct heat

Rib Tips: very end of a rack of spareribs after being trimmed to make St. Louis style ribs

Searing: meat is placed over high heat for a short period of time to brown and crisp the surface

Snake Method: low and slow cooking with charcoal placed around the inner edges of a barbecue (Only the first few are lit, and the others catch fire as heat reaches them.)

Smoke Point: temperature at which cooking fat begins to let off smoke

Truss: bind legs and wings of a bird to its body, ensuring it maintains an even shape so that none of the extremities dry out

Unrendered Fat: fat that hasn’t been fully cooked but is melted with a hard, caramelized crust

Wet-aged Beef: beef that’s been aged in a vacuum-sealed bag to improve the flavor

Wet Ribs: cooked ribs that have been brushed with sauce before, during and after cooking

Wolf Claws: barbecue tool that’s used to shred meat

Let’s eat!

Add to your grill glossary by visiting Burning Brisket.

Honey Mango Salsa Pork Chop

Honey Mango Salsa Pork Chop

Contributed by Justin Konopaski of Cooking with Justin
Instagram: @cooking_with_justin

Ingredients:
3 Tbsp. honey
2 Tbsp. soy sauce, low sodium
2 cloves garlic, crushed or minced
¼ cup chicken stock, low sodium
2 Tbsp. apple cider vinegar
1 Jerry’s Foods mango salsa container (recommended)
Salt, to taste
Pepper, to taste
Garlic powder, to taste

Grill set up: Indirect heat; all the coals on half the charcoal grill, or half the burners on one side of the gas grill. Grill should be 400–450-degree F on the hot side and 275–300-degrees F on the off-heat side.

Season the pork chops with salt, pepper and garlic powder, and cook on the grill for a minute or two on each side. (The intent is to cook the outside, but not quite finish them internally, yet.) Once mostly cooked, set aside and start the glaze. In a cast iron dish or pan, melt the butter, garlic, honey, chicken stock and apple cider vinegar until thick enough to glaze the pork chops without falling off. Glaze the pork chops and return them to direct heat to continue cooking; flip them every so often for even cooking on both sides. Remove from heat once the internal temperate reaches 145 degrees F. At this point, the glaze should be charcoal kissed, and the edges should be crispy. For a sweet way to beat the heat, top finished pork chops with Jerry’s Foods mango salsa and enjoy!

Jerry’s Foods
7760 Hargis Pkwy
651.458.0240
Facebook: Jerry’s Foods – Woodbury