Grilling
What to Cook This Weekend: It's Cookout Time
Beautiful weather means one thing: It's time to cook over an open flame.
Grilled Steak Salad with Beets and Scallions
If you don't feel like making aioli, use prepared mayonnaise and season it with mustard and garlic.
Thai Grilled Chicken Wings
The tangy dipping sauce is great with pretty much any grilled meat. Keep it on heavy rotation this summer.
Pan-Grilled Black Bass with Flavored Butters
"Anytime you grill or pan-fry fish," O'Connell says, "it's essential to thoroughly dry it before adding your fat."
Curry-and-Coconut-Milk-Grilled Pork Skewers
The little bits of fatback add an extra layer of deliciousness.
Roast Chicken with Rhubarb Butter and Asparagus
I love the way the sweet-and-sour rhubarb butter adds flavor to this chicken as it cooks—I think you will too!
Lamb-Bacon Burgers with Spicy Aioli
At Rioja, half of the bacon is replaced with ground fatback, a step that makes this excellent burger even better.
Tacos al Pastor
These pineapple and pork tacos are the original fusion food—a cross between Middle Eastern shawarma and the guajillo-rubbed grilled pork served by Mexican street vendors. The pork needs to marinate four hours.
Grilled Green Salad with Coffee Vinaigrette
Using these exact vegetables is not the point; choose whatever's in season and can stand up to being charred. The genius coffee dressing brings it all together.
Three-Day, Twice-Cooked Pork Roast with Fried-Herb Salsa Verde
This is a true weekend-long project—and that's a good thing. Seasoning, cooking, and crisping the meat over the course of three days mean you don't have to spend hours in the kitchen the day you're hosting a big meal. In fact, the extra time your pork spends in the refrigerator only improves the taste. This is the perfect-for-a-party pork that gives you plenty of time to drink a beer and watch (or play) a game or two before grilling up crispy, tender slabs of pork shoulder for a crowd.
Smoked Turkey with Hot Pepper Jelly Glaze
Smoking a whole turkey is little more work than roasting a bird, but it infuses the meat with a rich, woodsy flavor. All it requires is setting up a grill. Once that's done, the turkey's good to go—all it needs is a simple glaze made from hot-pepper jelly. The final glaze caramelizes on the skin and adds a sweet and sour heat to the smoky turkey.
Butterflied Turkey a la Parrilla with Chanterelles and Grilled Chicory
A grilled split turkey, golden brown as it comes from the parrilla, is one of my favorite dishes. Salt and pepper are all it needs. Such a simple preparation wants an equally uncomplicated but flavorful side dish. Chicory, which I learned to love when I worked in Italy as a young man, does the trick for me every time. Brushed with olive oil, seasoned with salt and pepper, and grilled to crispness, it is as good as the turkey that it graces. If you are lucky enough to have acquired some chanterelles or other wild mushrooms to sauté, they make the crowning touch. Their color is like the caramelized crust of the chicken.
I butterfly my turkeys differently than most butchers: I split them through the breastbone instead of the back, leaving the backbone in instead of discarding it. I think you get a juicier turkey this way, and an extra fun bone to pick.
Linguine Al Limone with Grilled Chia-Chicken Meatballs
Chia gel replaces eggs in this recipe, helping keep these chicken meatballs light and fluffy. The sauce is creamy and lemony, a combination that simply melts in the mouth. As an option, try spinach linguine, which pairs nicely with the flavors in this dish and looks beautiful.
Grilled Corn on the Cob with Glove-Box Recado
Chilly as July and August can be in San Francisco, you know it's summer when this delicious corn hits the Tacolicious menu. (It is so good that it transports you to sunshine, even if the city is socked in by fog and you're wearing a scarf.) If you already have the recado ready to go, this recipe is a cinch to make. Although the smokiness of the grill imparts great flavor, you can instead briefly boil the corn ears, halve them, and toss them with the recado-lime juice mixture. With the lime and the spices, no butter is needed. Try swapping out the corn for another vegetable, such as summer squash. To keep this recipe in the snack realm, chop the ears into thirds.
Charred Romaine with Tomatillo Dressing
Charred to a crisp: Not a statement usually associated with salads, but delicious nonetheless in this Mexican-inspired romaine number.
Hanger Steak with Shallots and Jerusalem Artichokes
The vinegared shallots and fresh herbs cut through the richness of the steak.
Grilled Bread with Ricotta & Tomatoes
Use very ripe—even overripe—tomatoes; they'll give up even more juice.