My new outdoor cooking blog, ash on the fire

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Another great post. Like you say, it's familiarising your self with regulating the temperature that's key - smaller batons etc. The skillet is great too, optimised for bush cooking. The Cadac BBQs 'Skottel' is a similar pan, use it with gas though :(
I wouldn't mind trying a teriyaki or szechuan dish on one of those skillets. I think it would work well as you don't need to keep moving the food like a stir fry.

Cheers for sharing, look forward to your next post!
 
Just posted up a new post on a different way of cake baking! Was a steep learning curve but I am happy with the end result.

Would love to know your thoughts

Bitter chocolate spice cake

Using soley lumpwood charcoal made me have to work hard!

Ash.
 
John

I was finding I was burning the tops/bottoms of a lot of stuff, this approach overcame that. It does however give a slightly heavier cake. If you do try it out I would love to know how you got on.

Ash
 
With "regular" items I was burning things, but I had the charcoal too close/touching the base, and too much on the lid. I also wasnt as good at rotating the oven base and lid as I should have. I will give cake a go though!
 
Just posted up a new post on a different way of cake baking! ... Would love to know your thoughts ...

Brown sugar! Now you're talking my language. :)

Just curious and ignorant (I'm no chef, nor even a cook), why unsalted butter if you're going to add the salt? I know it isn't ordinary salt but is there all that much salt in salted butter?
 
Cheers for the positive comments. T^he lack of internet was frustrating!

With regards to the salt I think they use unsalted butter so that they can adjust the salt content to the reciepe.
 

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