Cuisine from VIVIENNE
We have turfed the gas burning BBQ and gone back to the hibachi. The BBQ was not just old but some burners would not burn or were very uneven and I was sick of cleaning it with little to show for the effort. Various wasps were often deciding it was a great spot to turn their mud collections into chimneys and it had become decidedly unfriendly. It was despatched to the tip last year. The old hibachi was not looking too good either so it too went. It had not been made of the correct materials and had rapidly gone rusty. A new hibachi was finally found – much better construction but unfortunately without adjustable height. But it does a great job.
It has been put to good use but one does have to plan ahead (as usual with too much of what I do !). It has been great for family gatherings. So I am sharing a few things which are excellent when cooked over coals, slowly. This involves, mainly, meat on a stick. I use the bamboo ones – they won’t catch fire either. By the way, all the advice about soaking in water before using on a gas BBQ is rubbish – they still burn. Years ago I soaked a pile of them (you have to weigh them down as they float) for 18 hours – made no difference.
Prawns and scallops
Prepare green Aussie prawns and scallops and thread two or three of each on the stick. In a mortar smash up 3 cloves of garlic with a heaped teaspoon of Murray pink salt (just how much depends on how many seafood sticks you intend cooking). In a saucepan gently melt about 150 grams of butter (for 12 sticks roughly) and add garlic/salt mix and cook very gently to infuse and then add finely chopped parsley. When the charcoal is ready place seafood sticks on the grill and baste or spoon garlic mix. Cooking will take longer than you expect but results are very yummy.
Lamb
Try doing it souvlaki style on a stick (marinade overnight with lemon, garlic, salt etc). Or perhaps more like an old fashioned kebab with onions and red capsicum and mushrooms. Or, marinade in a tandoori mix. I regularly have my butcher bone out a leg of lamb and I portion it and freeze for later use in curries or satays.
Chicken
Chicken on a stick over charcoal is excellent. Use boned skinless thighs and do not cut chunky. You can marinade and cook and add a satay sauce (make your own or even use the rather good Ayam canned one). Actually you can cook it many ways – do whatever takes your fancy (honey/lemon or just salt and pepper).
Quail
I am about to do this very soon. Split them in two or just flatten the whole little bird out. As you cook it baste with lemon, a little salt and plenty of thyme. Quail are not expensive here – I can buy a six pack of the large variety for $21.
Salads
Prepare two or three suitable salads and make sure you have some cold beer and appropriate wines handy. Our last get together over the hibachi began at 1 pm and ended hours later. It was delicious and lovely. But remember to start the heat beads at least three hours before you want to begin cooking. See, you do have to plan ahead!
Finally
This is meant to help inspire you to be a little different. You won’t have any flame ups or worries about whether you are going to run out of gas. I always have the ingredients in the freezer so only need to ensure I have some decent salad stuff. With prawns you can use a few different additions (spicy salt, three different peppers and piri piri – grind in your mortar and sprinkle over prawns while cooking).
Calamari goes very well over charcoal.
My first hibachi went into use back in the 70s on the balcony of our unit in Sydney. I used to cook fresh sardines and lamb satays (not together though!). Fresh sardines are in the fish shops right now but do not buy them if they look a bit squashed.

Hi Viv, sounds great to me, I don’t BBQ any more but used to love chicken skewers. Marinade in lime juice, soy, sesame oil, honey and crushed garlic. I still soak my skewers for 15 minutes prior.
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That’s an oldie but a goodie. Quick and easy.
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If you’re looking for a last minute addition to your Easter brunch, definitely make these! Strawberry Cream Cheese Muffins from So Tasty, So Yummy 2 cups AP flour 1 1/2 cups sugar 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1/4 teaspoon salt 8 ounces cream cheese, softened 1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, softened 2 eggs 1/2 cup milk (I used 1%) 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract 1 cup chopped fresh strawberries Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cream together cream cheese, butter and sugar. Add eggs, milk and vanilla and mix until just combined. In another bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Add dry ingredients to mixing bowl and mix until just combined. Do not over mix. Batter will be thick, like cookie dough. Fold in strawberries. Spoon batter into paper lined muffin pans. Fill each cup about 3/4 high. Bake for about 20-25 minutes, until tops are golden. Cool on rack for at least 15 minutes. Makes 24 muffins.
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Much to choose from here vivienne, we’ll give some a go, however I’ll have to make do with the gas barbie. The butcher had a raffle and invited the then local member Maxine McKew to come along and draw a name out of the hat, anyhow she picked me and the rest is history.
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I love the sheer tenuosity of the juxtaposition, Algy. Laughed ? I nearly shat !
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Oops, Some extra words may have helped here.
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I had a good larf. 🙂
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On the farm we had many barbecues, the wood fired was the best, the scond prize went for the old Webber,and last the ones I like less are the gas barbies; tonight we had a quick one on the gas one, pork sausages….I missed the old wood fired one 🙂
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Unreal in its timing for me. I have a Barb-b-que supplied here and a filled gas bottle was a recent courtesy…and I have never Initiated a Barb-B. I started to look for literature about how I might prepare for such an event. Unreal this.
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Ah… I remember my first bar-b-que here in Oz… Whatever you do, don’t make the same mistake I did…
😉
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Ummm…I can’t imagine…got wasted and burnt yourself to a crisp almost but not entirely? Do tell I have visitors coming to this event. Do tell…
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Was just waiting for someone to beg me to tell ’em ‘Shoe; that’s why I left ’em in suspenders!
Nope; nothing quite so ordinary or predictable barbequeing my bum… And you must remember it was the very first time I officiated as priest at such a sacrifice… I was a little unsure of the correct protocols:
The mistake I made was to ask an apparently totally bewildered bunch of South Ozzies ‘How does everyone like their steak?’… Never felt like such a pillock in all m’ born days! From the complete and utter, stunned silence and puzzled looks from glazed-over eyes I got from everyone, I thought I must have been speaking a foreign language or something… Only cure was to apply more beer to the affected area; the affected area being my own confused and slightly ‘miffed’ self, whilst leaving all the meat to cook… When things got burned enough, people came up and started helping themselves and no-one went hungry; only one guest fell in the pool, so it was a very successful party all told… in spite of the language barrier!
😉
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‘…AS barbequeing my bum’…
😉
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How long ago was that?
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We might never know. 🙂
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I’m sure that would have changed your life forever…
😉
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Nah… I knew I’d get a nibble…
😉
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How long ago was it or is that a State secret? 🙂
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He’s not telling is he but I guess it was in the 50s, 60s or possibly 70s when men still traditionally were given charge of the BBQ. It was always very strange because most of them could not cook. You got the steak, chops and sausages all overdone. I remember it from childhood. But we ate it because we were hungry and that was the way things were.
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Viv, my Dad was a shocker at the barbie. He was a charcoal on the outside and raw on the inside kind of cook. Urk, bad memories, bad memories 🙂
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Trouserz – takes real talent to do that. Perhaps just a tad too close to the flames as couldn’t wait for the coals to form.
How is that Muffin recipe blow in above – on a Cooking on Charcoal topic and recommended for Easter ! Extraordinary.
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Sorry ladies; been offline for a coupla daze while my pc was in the repair shop… it was about thirty years ago; almost to the day! (Dun’t time fly when you’re ‘avin’ fun?!)
😉
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A great coincidence indeed.
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Crikey Viv! Whole calamari…? It looks like you haven’t taken the innards out of ’em! (Or are they ‘stuffed’? … and if so, with what?) And they’ve still got their wings on… and their skin!
(After a second look…) Oh… I see… you’re not actually cooking them yet; this is just a pre-cooking presentation of ingredients… daft bugger, I am!
🙂
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The photo is not from me. Our fine editor found the pic – unfortunately I forgot to take some photos the last time we used the hibachi here two weeks ago. So the image is just that – an image.
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The other clue that it is not my pic is that none of the food is on a stick. My hibachi has a solid metal grill, not mesh. The calamari would be cut up into roughly 4 x 6 centimetre pieces and when cooked would have curled up etc. Baby octopus would go well whole. Some suitable marinading first in something a little asian would be good – bit of ginger juice and brown sugar etc. for instance. I’ll dig up the marinade and post later. Our power is about to cut for some maintenance work and I think I can hear the cherry picker coming !
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For the calamari – soy sauce, brown sugar, little light oil and few squeezes of lime – should do the trick.
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Sounds good to me! What time’s tea?!
😉
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When you say ‘brown sugar’ do you mean ‘demerara’ or ‘muscovado’?
Does it make any difference? I suppose you mean demerara; I mean, I find the muscovado has a stronger flavor, almost like treacle (molasses, not ‘golden syrup’)… and I like that flavor, but might it not be a little overpowering for squid’s very delicate flavor?
(I know nothing about cooking; I’m just trying to look as if I do by asking intelligent-sounding questions!)
😉
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Not demerara. Brown sugar as it mixes in (melts) – there is the dark brown strong one but there is also a lighter brown one so use that. Marinade for no more than say one hour. Make it to your taste – the soy needs to be a bit sweet and use light soy – it is to be delicate, not strong.
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It looks and sounds delicious, Vivienne.
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Hi Lehan – see above. Not my hibachi !
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Sorry, Viv, I was in a bit of a hurry with the pic of the hibachi. Think of it as a generic picostity.
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No worries. I’m the twit for not thinking to get the camera out.
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Well, it sounds delicious anyway.
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