This Memorial Day of course marks the beginning of Summer and what better way to celebrate the season than to fire up your grill, right? Well for me anyway, it’s my preferred method of cooking when it heats up.

Grilling has it’s benefits, especially when it comes to trying to keep your home cool during the Summer months. By cooking outside, you’ll reduce the heat output of your kitchen which of course will make your air conditioner run harder trying to keep you comfortable. It will keep your cooling bill lower and easier on your pocketbook.
While grilling over propane is the cleanest burning way to cook up some food on the “barbie”, I’m a charcoal purist. I like the tast charcoal provides that I just can’t get on a gas grill. I used to exclusively use charcoal briquettes until I ran across a produce that I think is a little more natural: lump charcoal.
You may have noticed lump charcoal is popping up in more and more stores. My local Schnuck’s recently introduced their house brand of lump charcoal called “Full Circle” and bill it as a natural product. Most lump charcoal is pure, unadulterated wood scraps that are fired at high temperatures to develop the char. That’s it! Nothing else is added. Lump charcoal burns cleaner than briquettes and hotter. Sometimes it can be more expensive than briquettes and not burn as uniformly or long.
Charcoal briquettes however are a different story. They’re made from charred wood as well but are pulverized and compressed with saw dust, borax, starch, sodium nitrate and limestone. For more on what each of those fillers do, click here. If you begin grilling before the briquettes are ashy, it’s possible they can release a chemical type flavor into your food. The added chemicals, while claimed to be unharmful, are enough to drive me to use just natural lump charcoal.
So what if you currently have a charcoal grill and you’d like to reduce your emissions by grilling with a cleaner fuel? You might just run out and buy a brand new gas grill but that of course is wasteful thinking. I just ran across an interesting new product on the net that could be the way to convert your old charcoal grill, to a lean, green grilling machine.

The Flame Disk is billed as a "clean burning" fuel to use in your charcoal grill.
The manufacturer says the product is made from 100% ethanol, a renewable biofuel made from corn. They also claim that the emissions include a small percentage of carbon dioxide (less than charcoal) but is mostly made up of water. Plus they say it’s as easy as peel, light and grill. This seems like a great idea to me and would be willing to try it out sometime, especially on a camping trip when fumbling with a bag of charcoal and lighter fluid might be a total pain.
What’s your view on grilling? How do you make your experience more eco-friendly? Share your comments with our other readers!
If you liked that post, then try these...
Morning Cuppa Joe by Nate on July 19th, 2008
Have you ever thought about the environmental impact of all those paper coffee filters you might use to make your pot of coffee every morning? Our last coffee maker required a special kind of paper filter.
Reaping the Citrus Harvest by Nate on April 9th, 2011
Now is the time that Arizona citrus is reaching its peak harvest season.
The not-so "Green Princess Cookbook" by Nate on April 12th, 2010
Awhile back I was sent a copy of the Green Princess Cookbook to review.
Soggy March Garden Madness by Nate on April 1st, 2010
Since I last posted about the progress of my new raised garden beds, I don't think we've had more than two days straight without rain.
Enjoying the Apple Harvest by Nate on October 12th, 2009
.
Popularity: 2% [?]
