outdoor cooking Guide

Outdoor Cooking Electronic Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on outdoor-cooking
:
:



Main Outdoor Cooking Electronic sponsors


 

Latest Outdoor Cooking Electronic Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Outdoor Cooking Electronic!



Newest Best Sellers


Welcome to outdoor cooking Guide

 

Outdoor Cooking Electronic Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Building fire in Outdoor Cooking

from: IOWA

Building the fire For the beginner, the first step is learning to build a fire properly. Successful outdoor cookery calls for glowing coals, not active flames. The coals give off even heat. You may be an “old hand” at building campfires, but here are some practical suggestions.

1. Select an open spot, away from trees, dead leaves, or anything that may easily catch fire.

2. Start with a crumpled piece of paper or handful of tinder.

3. Arrange very small twigs or sticks in teepee fashion. (Do not use leaves; they smother the fire.) Lay the sticks so that plenty of air can get through the spaces between them. 

For a teepee fire —After the small twigs begin to burn, add larger sticks the same way you did the small ones. A teepee fi re burns quick and hot, with the flame directed to one spot. 

For a log cabin fire —Build larger sticks in log cabin style around the kindling. This is a long-burning fire but takes longer to get started. 

For a charcoal fire —This fire is easy to light. If you have never used charcoal, follow this plan.

1. Place the charcoal under the rack where the food is to be cooked.

2. Add crumpled newspaper. Light the newspaper.

3. When the coals begin to turn white or glow, they are ready. Stir the hot coals with a long, thick stick or an iron rod to distribute the heat more evenly. Add food onto the rack.

If the coals flame from fat dripping into the fire, sprinkle with water. A spray bottle is handy to use. 

Choose your fire wood

The kind of fi re also depends on the kind of wood you use. Avoid wood with a pithy center. It does not burn easily, and gives little heat. Use split logs rather than round, smooth ones. They burn more readily. 

Soft woods (pine, spruce, cedar, aspen, basswood, and birch) burn quickly and leave ashes but few coals. 

Hard woods (oak, ash, hickory, apple, walnut, cherry, maple) burn slowly and provide excellent coals for baking or toasting. 

How hot to build the fire

Beginners often ask how hot to build a fire. A quick rule of thumb is to hold your hand palm-side down at about the position the food will be above the fire and count (one-thousand-one, one thousand-two, etc.). 

If you can hold your hand for 

6 seconds or more, it is a slow fire; 

5 seconds is a medium-slow fire; 

4 seconds is a medium fire; 

3 seconds is medium-hot; and 

2 seconds is a hot fire. 

Most foods are best cooked over a medium fire.




Other Outdoor Cooking Electronic related Articles

Hungarian Outdoor Cooking Stoves
Simple And Easy Food Ideas For Hiking
Outdoor Cooking Classes
Free Outdoor Cooking Grills
Outdoor Cooking Burners

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Outdoor Cooking Electronic News

Almanac: Youth Expo's aim is to get kids outdooors

Josie Johnson, 12, of Burnsville, bagged this gobbler last month during Minnesota's youth turkey hunt. Put down the electronic gadgets, get off the couch and plunge into the Great Outdoors.

Read more...


Things to do, place to go

Registration is open for the University of Guam Summer Theatre Camp. This year's performance will be "Pinocchio."

Read more...


Outdoors Dan: Fletching small vanes, buying a GPS and more

Q. I am using small, 2-inch vanes for bow hunting and am having a hard time getting them fletched properly. Can you please help? A.

Read more...


Sustainability: A year of implementing new programs at Idyllwild Arts …

Share/BookmarkEditor’s note: The first part of this article appearred in the April 26 issue. By John R. Newman, Idyllwild Arts Academy Dean of Students Completed projects This winter we completed a comprehensive energy audit, sponsored by Southern California Edison, and have retrofitted close to 100 percent of the campus with compact fluorescent light bulbs and [...]

Read more...


GARDEN CITY LIBRARY NEWS

A teen works on crafts for the Teens and Tots program during a Teens and Tots training session held Saturday, April 28 at the Library. For those who missed the training sessions, makeup sessions for first time volunteers are available by appointment.

Read more...