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Beach Barbeque at Its Best!
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# : |
10223 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1986 |
1,095 Words |
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Alexandra Greeley Alexandra Greeley was food editor of the South China Morning
Post, Hong Kong, and staff writer for the Time-Life cooking
series "Great Meals in Minutes." |
This is a wonderful menu, in which East meets West, resulting in delicious meal with Indian and American overtones. The lusty sangria, chilled, slightly sweet, and filled with fresh fruit, is as authentically Spanish as an afternoon corrida.
If you are expecting a larger crowd, informal barbecue meals are adaptable to beaches, boats, or backyards - and can be expanded easily. Simply double the quantity of meat, salad, corn, and raspberry tarts - or even triple it, if your crowd's likely to be hungry. Set the fire, then sit back and watch the sunset. Your guests will cook their dinner and serve themselves.
Prehistoric cooks would be speechless if they could see what modern technology has accomplished: precooked, presliced, prepackaged foods, exotic cookware, and sleek kitchen appliances. And, boxed and tamed cooking fires. Even outdoors, fires have been trapped for man's ultimate control and pleasure.
Yet open-fire cooking is as popular for modern people as it was for cave-dwellers. What emerged years ago as an informal entertaining vogue for Californians is not only civilization's oldest cooking method, but in the past decade certainly has become an American summer obsession. To capture summer's outdoor flavor year-round, kitchen designers have even created indoor barbecue pits - and Stone Age chefs would shrug and say, "nothing new under the sun…"
Some scholars conclude that the term barbecue came from the Spanish or Arawak Indian word barbacoa, cooked up many centuries ago in the Caribbean. The Arawak's barbacoa consisted of a screen of
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