VMBURNS: It's hot outside, so I have fired up the grill. This time, I grilled pork chops. They were delicious. IN fact, I've made them twice more since the first time. You'll notice that I only made 2 pork chops, not 4. I also like the sweet grilled taste and used a tad more than the 1/4 cup brown sugar listed in the ingredient list. Sadly, the brown sugar doesn't appear in the ingredient picture, but trust me. It's there. If you don't like the sweetness, then you can reduce the brown sugar. I also LOVE using grill mats, They allow your grill to stay clean, but you still get the lovely grill marks on your food. I didn't have grill mats, so I sprayed my grill with Pam. NOTE: Do that before you fire the grill up to avoid flames. Don't ask how I know this.
GRILLED PORK CHOPS
INGREDIENTS
- 4 Pork chops, bone in
- 1/4 Cup Brown sugar
- 2 Tablespoons Smoked Paprika
- 1 1/2 Teaspoon Kosher salt
- 2 Teaspoons Ground Black pepper
- 2 Teaspoons Ground Mustard
- 1 Teaspoon Onion powder
- 1 Tablespoon Vegetable Oil
INSTRUCTIONS
- Let pork shops get to room temperature for 30 minutes before grilling.
- Preheat your grill with cover closed to approximately 400 degrees or Medium-high heat for ten minutes.
- Pat pork chops dry with paper towel and coat with vegetable oil
- Mix all of the dry ingredients in a Zip loc bag. Place the pork chops in the bag and coat with the dry rub.
- Place the pork chops on the hot grill. Leave undisturbed for 6 minutes, until they release from the grates with minimal effort. Rotate a quarter turn and continue grilling for 2-3 more minutes to create the cross hatch marks.
- Flip the pork chops and sear the second side for 2-3 minutes.
- Check the internal temperature of the pork chops with a thermometer. When the temperature reaches 140 degrees, remove from the grill.
- Let the pork chops rest for five minutes before serving.
- READERS: When it comes to barbecue, do you like sweet heat? Fiery heat? Or No heat? Let me know in the comments below.
As Maddy’s wedding day approaches, friends and family descend on the little town of New Bison, Michigan, to celebrate—so much so that Maddy wonders if there might be another happily-ever-after in store for her widowed father and innkeeper Mrs. Law. Unfortunately, she also has to deal with an unhappy couple: feuding cousins Hannah and Dorothy, who haven’t spoken in decades. Maddy can only hope the spectacular wedding cake crafted by her head baker doesn’t wind up as ammunition in a food fight.
But she doesn’t have to wait long for a wedding disaster to strike. When the imperious Dorothy crashes the rehearsal dinner—with several uninvited guests in tow—and starts battering everyone with constant complaints, the drama reaches reality-show levels. And the next day, Dorothy is dead . . . with Hannah standing over the body, bloody rolling pin in hand.
Nobody in town believes Miss Hannah could commit murder. But a detective newly relocated from New York doesn’t know the sweet, memory-challenged Hannah the way the locals do—and the evidence seems open-and-shut as an oven. Now, with her sous-sleuths the Baker Street Irregulars, the bride-to-be is busy digging into Dorothy’s past to catch a killer before she cuts the cake . . .














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