Grilled Vegetables are a Summer favorite.
The heart of grilling season has arrived giving new flavor, texture and color to some of your favorite meats, vegetables and fruits! Grilling is a natural way of cooking during summer. Here, squash, eggplant, bell peppers, and onion are sliced and grilled to perfection.
If you love the outdoors, there is no doubt you will most likely find yourself in front of or behind the grill at some point this Summer. The question isn’t what to grill, it’s HOW! Almost any food can be grilled. The obvious choices are chicken, tri-tip, and burgers, but vegetables like summer squash, eggplant, zucchini, bell peppers and fruits like pineapple, plums and nectarines are also fantastic on the grill.
Benefits you’ll enjoy by grilling
- Enjoying the outdoors
- Getting much needed Vitamin D
- Fresh air!
- Delightful conversations with friends and guests
- A great reason to wear a fun APRON !
Other benefits, you tend to use less oil which saves on fat and calories. Grilling adds a distinctive, somewhat smoky flavor to foods. It’s rare you need excess sauces for dipping. If you do like dipping sauces, use it for just that, dipping. Serve sauces on the side! Side sauces ensure savoring the natural grill flavors of foods and helps keep those unwanted calories at bay.
Here are a few grilling guidelines to increase health benefits :
1) Cooking meats, poultry, and fish at high temperatures can result in the conversion of heterocylic amines (HCA’s) and this includes the grill! Grill at lower temperatures for a slightly longer period. Or partially grill and then finish the cooking process in the oven at 375*-400*F, depending upon what you are cooking.
2) When fat and juices drip onto the coals during grilling, smoke is often generated which contains the cancer causing chemical, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The smoke can deposit these PAHs to the surface of the meats just waiting for your consumption. Choose lean, low-fat cuts of meat, trim excess fat to prevent dripping which causes the flames and resulting smoke.
3) Choose smaller cuts of meats to minimize grill time.
4) Prevent flames from coming in direct contact with the meat by cooking on cedar planks and placing foods at least six inches from the heat source.
5) Grill vegetables and fruits which are naturally low fat. Use a vegetable grill basket to prevent them from falling through the grate.
6) Remember, when in doubt, grill over lower temperatures and avoid flame flare-ups as much as possible.
See Recipe below where squash, eggplant, bell peppers, and onion are sliced, tossed in grape seed oil and grilled to perfection.
NOTE: to cut planks, place vegetable on cutting board laying vertically. Using your chef’s knife, thinly slice vegetable from top to bottom creating a “plank”. You may also use a mandolin but be careful not to slice too thinly. You want the vegetable to sustain the grill. ** Bell pepper “cubes” do not have to be perfectly cubed. Pay more attention to even sizing than perfect “cubes”.
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Copyright Susan Irby theBikini Chef® 2011 ~ This article and recipe was originally featured in Max Muscle magazine July 2011