Cooking & Baking
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Am I the only one that does this? Baked roofing nail potatoes on the grill?
Its LilBit fave, so I was just musing while they do their grill thing. Thought Id share,
Ingredients are potatoes, kosher salt, a spritz of melted butter, 6inch stainless steel nails, and a $1 hair spritzer from Dollar store, foil.
First, prep! Tear off as many pieces of foil and stack them, melt the butter, pour butter into the hair spritzer, and here we go!
Potato , on foil, spritz, turn tater, spritz, sprinkle Kosher, turn, Kosher again and wrap up.
Inset nail into potato BUT NOT ALL THE WAY THROUGH! ( youll see why later)
Repeat as needed.
On a hot grill until taters feel tender at a squeeze, ( please wear a grill glove or oven mitt)
Take off grill. With both hands heat protected, grab tater and pull out nail, drop the nail in bowl of cool water. ( this is why you dont put nail through, no stab wounds here)
What you will end up with, is a fluffy baked potato, and a crispy, salty peeling snack as well.
Because of the high heat,and butter or oil you spritzed, the nail moves heat throughout the whole potato instead of outside to in. The peeling takes the brunt to create a crispy skin, while the middle, will be perfect.
Oh, and it cuts the grilling time by about 40% .
And of course, wash your Taters!
Disclaimer: I tossed some fun stuff in here, but , this is the only way we eat baked potatoes in our Lil world.
I now return to my regularly scheduled day,
KozandLilBit
PJMcK
(22,887 posts)The nail transfers the heat cooking the potato from inside as well as outside.
It works on the grill and in the oven. Dont use a nail in a microwave!
I got some stainless steel nails as they dont rust.
kozar
(2,853 posts)Ive done for years as well. As I love this forum, and the things Ive learned from others her on techniques, thought Id share.
Oh and , I just ran out to check taters, grill ran out of propane, maybe I should spend some time in the Outdoor Living forum. Lol
MiHale
(10,784 posts)except dont use the nail anymore. Large piece of foil then I dump some kosher salt in a pile wet down with olive oil and the rub the mixture all over the potato wrap tightly, grill. Repeat with more potatoes if needed. Skin still gets crispy.
Delicious.
kozar
(2,853 posts)Like , way back, way way back in the day when my Dad taught me how to roast a whole prime rib roast. The salt and moisture create a crust.
Hmm, this would make the peeling even crunchier?
And I learn yet again, thanks!!!
Koz
MiHale
(10,784 posts)All the delicious experiments. Salt cooking does make a beautiful crust.
Gotta watch it nowadays cuz of heart crap.
Dads recipe for rib roast took 4 boxes of Kosher salt, that had to broken with a hammer, and you discard all the salt. ( He only did it on NYE, ) But , Im gonna try this concept next time.
Koz
marble falls
(62,073 posts)Nickle in the steel, lead in the steel to make it more ductile to form the heads. Lubricants to shape the point. Zink for the coating.
kozar
(2,853 posts)Putting zinc on the taters! ( sarcasm, LilBit is in a great mood today, which, puts me in a better mood)
Good point taken, marble.
Koz
marble falls
(62,073 posts)(Don't let the iron fool you, 90% of nails are made of steel, nails use lower grades of steel, under 400SS. It's not the steel, it's the grade of steel and what they coat with. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zinc_toxicity}
Material & coating
Sometimes, the elements of the project will be exposed to outdoor or wet conditions for a long time. If so, except for
a proper nail length, an anti-corrosion surface coating is another factor to consider in making the project strong and
reliable.
○ Electro-galvanized. it is a zinc electrolytic process that adding a thin coating to the carbon steel nails.
Electrogalvanizing coating can withstand dry and low-corrosion applications for a few more months or
possibly an extra year. But it is not recommended for corrosive environments.
○ Hot dipped galvanized. It is an effective way of metal corrosion, mainly used for metal structure on the
facilities of the industry. Hot dipped galvanized nails are recommended for pressure treated wood and
cedar which can cause standard nails to corrode quickly.
○ Stainless Steel 304/316. These types of materials are the appropriate choices for high level corrosion
protection requirement. Especially for most exterior applications. 316 grade stainless steel,
chromium-nickel alloys, can stand up Marine and corrosive industrial atmos
You could go to a scrap dealer and buy a rod of food grade stainless and cut our own spud nails, or even use skewers.
kozar
(2,853 posts)I understand, but, please, not on here.
Koz
rsdsharp
(10,128 posts)when I was a kid. We had six of them (there were six of us) and they were kept in the drawer with all of the other cooking utensils.
Ive got a beer can chicken contraption for the grill. It has holders for two cans for the chickens, and spikes for potatoes around the outside; same principle.
kozar
(2,853 posts)I just bought a beer can chicken cooker, she loved it!
Koz
yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)It roasts a beautiful chicken!
kozar
(2,853 posts)Instead of beer though
Kali
(55,740 posts)And also tend to use bacon grease for the bake, butter for eating. And we do same in oven or grill. Really cuts the time.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)The only way I ever got fluffy baked potatoes was if I cut a very deep X into the top, within a millimeter or so of the bottom, and baked them for at least 90 minutes, usually when I was baking a whole chicken. Super long baking is what did the job for me, that with a very large cut into the potato to release all the steam.
I'm in an apartment and have noplace to grill, so this is what I have to do. It's just an alternate method to yours.