Heinz BBQ Sauce Updates The American Picnic Grill
(Chef Roberta Deen) Heinz Pitmaster Collection has certainly secured an eye-level position on grocery store shelves. The Collection features five new regional barbecue sauces created in collaboration with five regionally famous chefs or Pitmasters as they are known in the fire-and-brimstone competitive world of serious grilling over open flames. Each collaboration has produced a distinctive flavor that pairs well with a wide range of meats and vegetables. Bottled in convenient top-side down, get-every-last-drop bottles, these sauces will encourage the buyer to be as innovative and fearless as the Masters themselves.
This is a technique I learned on the internet to clean and cook corn on the cob. It truly works and makes a quick and easy job of preparation.
Cut a portion of the long stem end of the corn so it will fit into the plastic wrap easily.
Wrap up the whole ear and seal well. Microwave a pair of ears in a 1000 watt microwave for 4 minutes.
Do not unwrap. Cut through the stem end far enough up the ear to see that the leaves are cut free and you can see the corn.
Grasp the hot corn with a clean kitchen towel and pull and twist until the husk and silk slip off.
Perfectly clean and ready to eat or to get creative with.
I brushed liberally with the new Heinz Pitmaster Barbecue sauce – Carolina Tangy. It has an apple cider vinegar tang to it that will compliment the sweetness of the corn.
Grill or broil until nice and charred. I sprinkled with grated Parmesan cheese and served to very happy guests. Simple, a little bit different, nice and tangy from the sauce and the sweetness.
My final experiment was with the Texas Bold and Spicy from Pitmaster Robert Sierra, a grand champion Pitmaster from San Marcos, Texas. As advertised, there was nothing shy about this thick and bold sauce. It is spicy but will not drive the “no heat and chile” crowd from the table. This time I used Angus 80% ground beef, top of the line, lightly mixed in about a third of a cup of the Texas Bold sauce into the meat and formed patties. I pan-fried the patties to medium-rare, gave them one last brush of sauce on top and served them up with a side of sauce for dipping. Not a morsel of the richly-flavored meat or sauce was left.
The outside grill is in the process of being set up for the summer launch and I am looking forward to trying all five of these new sauces on slow-cooked pork, leg of lamb and lots of great vegetable combinations. They will all be winners this season.