New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
It's great hearing professional and varied insights to add to my cooking bag of tricks, I think Mayor nailed part of the problem for me, is a lack of good ventilation inside; I cook on a Jennair downdraft poorly vented cooktop; so I am probably cooking at too low a heat, trying to keep the smoke and fumes to a minimum. AJ that's an interesting flip side to the opinion of river sand; years ago, I worked in a precast plant, the owner was extremely "frugal" and started buying cheaper dredged up river sand instead of the sharp concrete sand, the Italians hated it, they said it made the concrete like mud. I thank everyone for their replies, I'll be trying some of those ideas out, the next time bad weather forces me off the BBQ into the house.
Oh yeah, and read Cliffrod's post twice before you begin!
Cheap Coleman white gas gas stoves or a propane turkey fryer burner work a treat. Cook outside and the smell stays outside. Between the garage and driveway that is where the lions share of the cooking is done. Especially when frying, searing, cooking fish or other foods that smell tends to linger around for days.
There was previous thread on cast iron cookware. I thought I'd post this with a vid on they're made.https://kottke.org/21/08/how-cast-iron-pans-are-made?utm_source=GetTheElevatordotcom
I've watched some of your amazing Coleman meals and I've wanted to try it, but whenever I reach for the stove, the pump gets fussy, can't find the fuel or the funnel etc, but I might up my game for the CI tks
Tom, You start some of the most educational and informative threads on the forum. Thank you sir! And yes, the wide range of knowledge and talent on this forum is wonderful.