Barbecues & outdoor cooking – without a Cadac or Cobb
Posted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 6:50 am
I do like a barbecue 

Way back in 1990 I made one out of a 40-gallon oil drum, cut a quarter of it off as a hinged lid and had a stainless grill on it, but it was just a bit too good, it tended to incinerate most food rather than cooking it. Chicken wings would still be frozen in the centre with the outside looking like they’ve been inside a nuclear reactor

For a while we just used a big paella pan with a propane bottle, ideal for cooking breakfast for everyone at once....

....except there was only me & Jr camping at the time

We’ve also used the same kit for its proper purpose too

We bumbled along from there with disposables....

....small camping stoves....

....medium camping stoves....

....large camping stoves....

....industrial-sized barbecues....

....and any fire-pit that happened to be available on a campsite.

Then we stumbled upon the Rockford folding barbecue from B&Q, this was brilliant and designed by someone who obviously had barbecues themselves.

It was later featured in The Telegraph and The Sun to rave reviews....

....but when our third one died in Llangollen this year (that’s near Wales) they’re no longer available.
Meanwhile, in 2006 we were at a European Market in Manchester and there was a stall flogging Moroccan tagines. We got one, and the sales operative was keen on us also buying the brazier to go with it. I wasn’t convinced but she did have a persuasive manner so I got one of them too. Now most of these braziers (majmars in the lingo) are clay, I’ve never seen steel ones anywhere else.
We did a few tagines with it and it was good, but a bit limited. Then we figured we could use it with a frying pan instead of the tagine, and perhaps it would make a good camping stove. Then in 2011 I knobbled a barbecue grill to fit, so it could be used as a proper barbie too. This has since proved to be the best bit of cooking kit we’ve ever had, fits snugly under the rear seat of the Bongo and super-easy to deploy. And it does everything (that we need anyway)...

Lamb tagine

Quail tagine

As a chiminea

For your kettle if you’re not on EHU

For the perfect breakfast

Noodles, Spam & beans

de rigueur Burgers

Frikadellen (sliced in half with a slice of cheese inserted in the centre too
)

Donner kebab

Spam

The ubiquitous sausages

Chorizo

Merguez sausages

Bacon

Derbyshire oatcakes. Like Staffordshire oatcakes but better

Piri-piri chicken wings

Whole spatchcocked piri-piri chicken

Sirloin steaks

Ribeye steaks

T-bone steaks

Fillet steaks

Tomahawk steak

Belly pork

Pork loins

Pork medallions

Pork ribs in a variety of marinades

Lamb cutlets

Barnsley chops

Lamb Souvlakia

Kangaroo steaks – to give your barbie that bit of extra bounce

Moose leg steaks

Veal liver

Especially for Alison 01326 – Barbecued Cornish pasties

Frogs’ legs

Snails

Salmon, chorizo & prawns

Paella

Salmon steaks

Mackerel

Rainbow trout

Sardines

Sea bream

Pan-fried sea bass

Kippers

Lobster

Prawns

Octopus

Squid – and a big prawn

Steamed mussels in coconut milk

Fish Fingers

Barbecued Halloumi – nearly ok for veggies

Jacket spuds

Asparagus – for the tree-huggers

Polenta

Corn-on-the-cob

Vegetable kebabs

Mushrooms

Red peppers

Green peppers

Onions

Cherry tomatoes

Garlic

Little Gem lettuce

More defenceless vegetables being incinerated

Little Gems, tomatoes & mushrooms

For herby campsite aromas

Crazy campsite lighting

Barbecued pineapple with Angostura bitters & brown sugar


After-dinner marshmallows

Bananas with Flumps in the middle

Providing campsite ambience in the rain

And the piece de resistance – Toast!!
….

….and Croque Monsieur grilled under the barbie

Cheese & Spam RidgeMonkey!!

After-dinner coffee
Now I just need to get a new one made in stainless steel that will last forever!
The ultimate goal? – Perfection in barbecued bacon



Way back in 1990 I made one out of a 40-gallon oil drum, cut a quarter of it off as a hinged lid and had a stainless grill on it, but it was just a bit too good, it tended to incinerate most food rather than cooking it. Chicken wings would still be frozen in the centre with the outside looking like they’ve been inside a nuclear reactor


For a while we just used a big paella pan with a propane bottle, ideal for cooking breakfast for everyone at once....

....except there was only me & Jr camping at the time


We’ve also used the same kit for its proper purpose too


We bumbled along from there with disposables....

....small camping stoves....

....medium camping stoves....

....large camping stoves....

....industrial-sized barbecues....

....and any fire-pit that happened to be available on a campsite.

Then we stumbled upon the Rockford folding barbecue from B&Q, this was brilliant and designed by someone who obviously had barbecues themselves.

It was later featured in The Telegraph and The Sun to rave reviews....

....but when our third one died in Llangollen this year (that’s near Wales) they’re no longer available.
Meanwhile, in 2006 we were at a European Market in Manchester and there was a stall flogging Moroccan tagines. We got one, and the sales operative was keen on us also buying the brazier to go with it. I wasn’t convinced but she did have a persuasive manner so I got one of them too. Now most of these braziers (majmars in the lingo) are clay, I’ve never seen steel ones anywhere else.
We did a few tagines with it and it was good, but a bit limited. Then we figured we could use it with a frying pan instead of the tagine, and perhaps it would make a good camping stove. Then in 2011 I knobbled a barbecue grill to fit, so it could be used as a proper barbie too. This has since proved to be the best bit of cooking kit we’ve ever had, fits snugly under the rear seat of the Bongo and super-easy to deploy. And it does everything (that we need anyway)...

Lamb tagine

Quail tagine

As a chiminea

For your kettle if you’re not on EHU

For the perfect breakfast

Noodles, Spam & beans


de rigueur Burgers

Frikadellen (sliced in half with a slice of cheese inserted in the centre too


Donner kebab


Spam


The ubiquitous sausages


Chorizo

Merguez sausages


Bacon


Derbyshire oatcakes. Like Staffordshire oatcakes but better


Piri-piri chicken wings

Whole spatchcocked piri-piri chicken

Sirloin steaks

Ribeye steaks

T-bone steaks


Fillet steaks

Tomahawk steak


Belly pork

Pork loins

Pork medallions

Pork ribs in a variety of marinades

Lamb cutlets

Barnsley chops


Lamb Souvlakia


Kangaroo steaks – to give your barbie that bit of extra bounce


Moose leg steaks

Veal liver


Especially for Alison 01326 – Barbecued Cornish pasties


Frogs’ legs


Snails


Salmon, chorizo & prawns

Paella

Salmon steaks

Mackerel

Rainbow trout

Sardines

Sea bream
Pan-fried sea bass

Kippers


Lobster

Prawns

Octopus


Squid – and a big prawn
Steamed mussels in coconut milk

Fish Fingers


Barbecued Halloumi – nearly ok for veggies


Jacket spuds

Asparagus – for the tree-huggers


Polenta

Corn-on-the-cob
Vegetable kebabs
Mushrooms
Red peppers
Green peppers

Onions

Cherry tomatoes

Garlic

Little Gem lettuce

More defenceless vegetables being incinerated


Little Gems, tomatoes & mushrooms

For herby campsite aromas

Crazy campsite lighting

Barbecued pineapple with Angostura bitters & brown sugar



After-dinner marshmallows

Bananas with Flumps in the middle


Providing campsite ambience in the rain


And the piece de resistance – Toast!!


….and Croque Monsieur grilled under the barbie


Cheese & Spam RidgeMonkey!!

After-dinner coffee

Now I just need to get a new one made in stainless steel that will last forever!

The ultimate goal? – Perfection in barbecued bacon

