Efficient Outdoor Cooking With Kamado Ceramic Smoker

on Tuesday, 22 July 2008

Kamado ceramic smoker are drills that use ceramic smokers of high quality to grill, smoke or do outdoor traditional cooking. They cook by radiating heat from the charcoal. They cook under low and heat-which takes time but gives a complex flavor to the meat. A lot of charcoal has to be used to maintain the low temperatures required for cooking. The more charcoal used, the higher the volumes of dry and hot air required. The air dries the meat and it is responsible for the high loss of your fuel and wood.

Many amateur cooks and chefs use them today and prefer them to ovens. They are able to distribute heat to the food being cooked and the cooking temperatures are easy to control. This smoker came to use in the 1960's and has grown widely to be accepted as the most preferable barbeque grill.

A ceramic smoker uses densely glazed grills to reduce the loss of heat. They leave the meat moist, smooth and tantalizing. The smoker has three layers: porous insulation, dense hot face and jacket. The layers only require a small amount of fuel to burn the meat. Only a small ball of charcoal is enough to fully burn and produce heat at low temperatures.

Most of these Kamado ceramic smokers requires frequent refilling after every four too five hours. The insulation used on the smokers makes them be able to give stable levels of heat and at a slower rate by producing low temperatures. Ceramic cookers give you control over your cooking. You don't have to stand by watching the cooking. You can go to sleep or undertake other duties. This is because you can set the temperature that you wish to cook with and they won't change until you come back to re-change them.

The ceramic smoker has become the best cooking alternative because it is more efficient and goes ahead to add an aesthetic look for your outdoor. They are made of different colors and styles and there is no way that you will miss one that is going to complement your preference. It can be used to cook, grill or smoke different types of food. Although meat is the most common, bacon, and pizza can also be cooked for slow and low temperature cooking.

The cookers are built of the finest and highest quality of materials, which make it a grill, smoker and cooker all at the same time. It has ceramic walls that are able to conduct and control different heat levels; it saves on fuel because it only requires a small amount of fuel to cook, and unburnt charcoal can be reused. Food cooked from the smoker is the tastiest; it withstands all types of weather conditions all year round. The ceramic used is rust proof; it adds a decorative touch to the cooker. You don't need to keep tending and watching over it, it is fast to light and can withstand temperatures from 0 degrees to 1800 degrees.

Kamado Ceramic Smoker is a grill that is both economical and efficient. It is the answer to all of your outdoor barbecues. Ceramic smokers are beautiful to look at and give irresistible favors to your food. Use the provided link to know more and but the best Kamado Ceramic Smoker for your home.


***** See more for info about this, please go to Coconut Charcoal Indonesia
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Can You Eat Your Makeup? Detox Your Regimen and Save Your Health!

on Tuesday, 8 July 2008

Did you know that the beauty industry in the USA is pretty much self-regulated? Aside from a few banned substances (maybe nine or ten), cosmetic companies in the USA can put in any ingredient they want in their products.

Things from crushed bugs to formaldehyde can turn up in your lipstick, moisturizing lotion or shampoo from intended ingredients or by-products of processing. (The bugs being intended ingredients because of the color in their bodies).

If you don't think your skin takes these ingredients in, think again. Your skin is your largest organ. And yes it keeps out many harmful things. But, as far as chemicals go it can through transdermal absorption take in medications (as with patches for quitting smoking), pesticides, herbicides, and any harmful ingredient in your "beauty" products right into your bloodstream.

If you think the FDA has your back, you are wrong about that, too. They do not require companies to provide safety data nor do they test your personal-care products for safety before they hit the market.

The "safety" testing by companies themselves is focused on the short-term reactions such as rashes. They don't even know the long-term effects of many of the chemicals that are used.

The body has a way of protecting itself and some ingredients migrate to fat cells for safe storage and do not leave the body right away. Many toxic chemicals that are found in your beauty products are byproducts and are not listed on labels.

Check out the labels of the products you're buying! Here are some ingredients (not an all-inclusive list by any means) to look for that cause risk for diseases like cancer:
  • 1,4-dioxane (1-4D, sound similar to 2-4D?) It's a byproduct and won't be found on labels. It's found in around 67 percent of children's bath products as well as shampoos, body lotions and face creams that are made with the ingredients of PEG, polyethylene, or ingredients that end in "eth" or oxynol".
  • Aluminum salts that you'd find in antiperspirants.
  • Chemical sunscreens like PABA, benzophenone, homosalate etc.
  • Coal tar in dandruff shampoo and anti-itch cremes.
  • DEA, MEA, TEA and ETA are foaming agents.
  • Any "aldehyde" that's used as a preservative. You guessed it, like embalming fluid formaldehyde.
  • Fragrance - Who knows?
  • Lead and Mercury like Thimerosal may also be a contaminant.
  • Nanoparticles can easily be absorbed into your skin.
  • Parabens can migrate to body tissue.
  • Petroleum Distillates/Solvents
  • Anything with "phthalate" in it's name are hormone disruptors. Also DBP, DEHP, DMP, DEP.
  • Basically anything that sounds like a chemical...

So, what is one to do? Use some common sense. As with food, try to cut way back on products that have ingredients that you can't pronounce and have 14 letters in it's name to lower your toxicity exposure.

If you can eat it, it's safe to put on your skin. Try going natural like DIY personal-care products such as these:
  • Baking soda shampoo - a tablespoon in a cup of water
  • Lemon or Apple Cider Vinegar rinse - two tablespoons of either in a cup of water
  • Cornstarch Dry shampoo
  • Eggs and olive oil conditioner
  • Avocado conditioner - mashed up avocado
  • Coconut milk rinse
  • Lemon and vodka hairspray - vodka is the preservative (no, really)
  • Aloe Vera styling gel
  • Flax seed gel - two tablespoons boiled in a cup of water.
  • Treatment for acne really starts in your gut with probiotics
  • Activated charcoal with a little olive oil for eye liner
  • Beet juice for lip color
  • Brown sugar or sea salt in jojoba, coconut or olive oil with vanilla - body scrub
  • Baking soda and essential oil - deodorant applied with a short, wide brush
  • Coconut, olive oil or jojoba oil - applied while your still wet from your shower and then towel dry to remove excess makes an excellent natural moisturizer.

These are just a few suggestions. I know if you did an internet search for natural or DIY personal-care products you'd come up with tons of results from people just like you who wanted to cut their toxic exposure and tried their own thing. Learn from them what does and doesn't work.


***** See more for info about this, please go to Coconut Charcoal Indonesia
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