Some of my favorites (BBQ schtuff, party or otherwise),
All can be served directly off the grill hot, or dished and served at room temp:
Carne Asada
Shrimp or Scallops
Mussles
Portobello Mushrooms.
Asparagras
Corn
Ridiculously easy Tomato "Basil" Mozerella Arugula salad (not grilled)
Easiest first:
Salad:
Combine small mozerella balls with a couple tablespoons of pesto, a bunch of cherry/grape tomatoes, and baby arugula leaves. Toss to coat evenly. Done.
Corn
(BIG HINT: Make sure you buy ones that are TOTALLY in the husk, no strip torn off... you can still slit and pull open in the store to judge the kernals inside, just don't rip it open.)
-Leave it in it's husk, but break off any silk sticking out.
- Stick ears on edge of grill or on top rack
- Rotate occasionally
- Take off after about 10 minutes
- Shuck and serve
Portobello Mushrooms
- Wash and cut off stems. leave whole
- Drizzle gills with olive oil, salt & pepper
- Grill on edge of cue, or upper rack, gill side up OR down, until soft & juicy
- Pull off, cut into quarters, serve
Asparagus
- Wash and break off tough bottom part of stem
- Coat in olive oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper
- Grill perpendicularly to slats, directly on grill, until tops are crispy and whole is bright green with a little char
Mussels
- Buy a cheap big stockpot (20 bucks at safeway type). Metal, big, tall, thin (aka no double walls or heavy base), unless you have one already that you don't mind scorching over open flames.
- Fill with
* A few pounds of mussels (washed and debearded, discard any broken ones)
* A handful of chopped garlic
* A bunch of parsley, with the stems cut off, then rocked over a few times with a knife.
* A couple sticks of butter
* A few cups of dry white wine (I like Black Box Chardonnay, in particular, for this recipe)
(optional, mostly for color) A half cup of diced purple onions or a couple cloves of shallots diced
- Place lid on top of pot and set on the grill.
- Stir occasionally until they've all steamed open (discard any that don't)
- Use a slotted spoon to pull them out and put them in a bowl, shells still on.
- Pour over about a cup of the liquid & serve
(Optional...cook the sauce down/add a bit of cornstarch or flour to make a fantastic linguine sauce...or to dip bread in...or freeze to use as a base for clam/seafood chowder
Carne Asada:
(BIG HINT: Use skirt steak. It not only tastes better then flank steak, it's cheaper, and it cooks faster)
-Coat skirt steak with Santa Maria Seasoning
-Marinate for 1-6 hours in:
* Lime Juice (enough to cover)
* Cillantro (one bunch per two steaks, chopped, including stems)
* Purple onion
* Olive Oil
- Place flat on really hot grill as close to the coals as possible.
- Flip
- Check for rare/med/medW/well done (as you like it)
- Pull it off and let it rest a few minutes
- Cut into 1/4 - 1/2 inch strips
- Serve with tortillas, pico de gaillo, rice and beans, avacado, whatever.
Shrimp or scallops (these are actually easier then they look, and cook in nothing flat)
( A grill pan -a frying pan or wok with holes all over it- makes this go faster for the shrimp ((since you don't have to take the time to skewer them)) and is essential for the scallops)
- Defrost under running water
- Toss in bowl and coat liberally with olive oil
- Add chopped garlic, salt, pepper
(Optional: Mix up what the marinade is. Ginger, garlic, soy, & honey is fantastic, as is cajun seasoning, as are garlic and italian herbs, as are slices of any pepper, bell/anaheim/etc, cillantro & lime (don't marinade lime or lemon with seafood longer the 5 minutes), whiskey and brown sugar, phad thai sauce, what have you + salt and pepper with all variations)
- Allow to marinade for as long as you feel like. 10 minutes to 2 hours. (as long as you aren't marinading in citrus, the citric acid will cook them)
- Place grill-pan on grill and scoop shrimp or scallops onto pan. Try not to dumo all the marinade on the coals or it will smother the fire. The drippings of oil are fantastic though, because they flame up which creates wonderful flavor.
- Shake grill pan occasionally, to cook evenly and to get a few more flames sizzeling around the scallops/shrimp.
- It's done cooking in about 2-3 minutes max. The edges should be seared, and the seafood opaque. Pop one in your mouth to "test", they're like candy. They're done if they're not cool in the center. Seafood cooks in next to nothing, and continues cooking from residual heat for the next few minutes.
- Pour into a dish or on a plate, and serve hot or at room temp.