Other food?
Oh, you mean that green stuff the womenfolk do? I thought that was a decorative centrepiece for the table!
Nah, I agree that's part of it.
I'd argue that using marinades seems a bit pointless, as the natural flavour of the meat is the more important aspect... at least in my opinion. Burying it under different flavours is just criminal... kinda like putting ketchup on stuff!
Anyway, marinades were invented to tenderise cheap, tough cuts and hide the lack of quality, weren't they? Don't need that with decent meat!
If you don't use marinades and dry rubs you are missing out on a whole world of cooking. And where did you get this "decent meat' idea form. True BBQ is all about getting cheap tough cuts of meat and cooking it low and slow for hours. Beef Brisket, pulled pork, ribs, all the cheapest toughest cuts of meat. When it comes to Chicken, thighs rule the roost, the fat renders down nicely and adds lots of flare when it hits the coal/heat plate.
In fact I would go as far as saying that for the most part you shouldn't be putting high quality meat on a BBQ, for some definition of high quality. E.g. Chicken breast will tend to dry out and wont take on much flavor on a BBQ, unless you have a good marinate that drips into the heat source. Chicken thighs are much better . Steaks, something like a fillet Mignon is going to be best pan seared as it doesn't have the fat content to do well on a BBQ. A Rib Eye streak is a good exception, the high fat content and extra rendering required suits a grill.
You bog standard sausages and burgers are all hgih fat contnent low quality meat, which is why they do well on a grill sas the fat drips off and causes flare ups.
If that were the case, every recipe should work to 100% perfection then, right? "On for 10 mins at setting 3, then remove and serve"?
Nope...
We have electric-only in our house and even the various (scientifically proven, by the way) formulae to convert from gas cooker instructions don't often work, despite the electric cooker working exactly as it's supposed to. It's more about knowing your individual cooker - The difference between gas, electric and coal is quite stark. I have professional chefs backing me up on this one, as they've used my kitchen!
Of course there is a small difference between electric or gas hobs, but that doesn't change the way water boils in a pan. You boil a pan of water and put an egg in for 3 minutes it will do he exact same thing regardless of the heat source because water boils at 100*C. The only differences will be how long the pan takes to reach boiling point, or cool down if you lowered the temperature.
Or in knowing that it doesn't need to be so complicated... or at least that the fundamentals matter more.
Good fresh pasta is a fundamental.
With both charcoal and wood, it's utterly inconsistent so very important in the type(s) you choose, the pieces you use, how you lay it, how you maintain it and how you monitor it. It's almost like extreme-overclocking a system. If it were that much of a science, we'd all be 8-Pack... [looks down at stomach, just to check].
That is stuff you learn when you are 10 years old helping your dad BBQ. There is nothing difficult about starting a charcoal fire, there is no skill in it at all. Especially these days when people just throw some lighters under a chimney.
There is no art in charcoal either, just hassle, which isn't fun. Fun is playing with my child on her swing while I know my food is cooking to perfection.Gas is just on or off, with fairly precise control settings.
No art. No fun. Certainly doesn't taste of burnt wood, either.
If your BBQ food tastes of burnt wood then something is very wrong with your cooking. That sounds pretty disgusting.
If I'm truly honest - The best braai I ever had was back on my 30th birthday, in a park, done using a pair of cheap portable foil barbecues from the petrol station - No marinades, sauces, fancy combinations or anything like that - Just the basic fundamentals done to perfection for eleven people on a very crappy heat source, by a guy who knew what he was doing.
Yep, so he could have used gas.
Charcoal or gas is just a heat source, nothing more nothing less. It has no smoke, no flavor, nor aromatics, no special properties. It is just pure and simple heat. Flavor comes from the liquid s dripping off the meat and hitting the heat source, which is going to be identical on gas or charcoal.
Now smoking, that is a whole different ball game and a different type of cooking but again, charcoal, vs gas (and elec) is not a big deal. Those are all providing a heat source to a tray of wood chips/pellets. The only exception is wood powered smokers, where the burning wood is providing the smoke and heat together.