


Squash your hesitation
Here's how to grill fresh vegetables right, no matter the size or shape

Look on the bright side: What with global warming sending our poor, precious planet into a hellbound death spiral, and summer's newly blistering temperatures turning your kitchen into Satan's sauna, this is the perfect opportunity for you to spend a little more time outside at the grill. So grab your tongs, Prep Schoodents, and let's grill us some vegetables.
Why you need to learn this
Unless you're a werewolf, you can't just be grilling meat all the time. And even if you are a werewolf, you must have at least a couple human friends who you might want to have for dinner. (Or rather, have over for dinner.) Or, lycanthropy aside, perhaps you eschew the bloody victuals altogether, opting instead for what our vegan friends at Mercy For Animals (Look them up!) refer to as a plant-based diet. If any of these holds close enough to true, I suggest hieing down to your local farmers market, picking up an armload of beautiful, fresh vegetables, and then firing up the grill.
The steps you take
Remember that the grilling of vegetables is not an impenetrable mystery like the true identity of Jack the Ripper or the whereabouts of D.B. Cooper. All we're doing is applying heat, just like in the kitchen. The principles are the same. Once you come to terms with that, the main thing to think about — and you've got to think about this with meat, too — is whether your vegetables will work better with direct heat or indirect heat.
Grills, particularly charcoal grills, tend to be very, very hot. That's why they're perfect for relatively thin items like steaks, because the interior cooks quickly, before the surface gets overly charred. If an item is very thick, on the other hand, when the outside is perfect, the inside will still be raw. Likewise, by the time the inside is properly cooked, the outside will look like the side of Mrs. O'Leary's barn.
For those larger pieces of meat or vegetables, indirect heat in a covered grill works just like your oven.
A couple more general things: First, grill marks. If your vegetables are cut into long, thin, oblong planks (as opposed to rounds), lay them on the grill at a 45-degree angle to the grate. After grill marks develop (gently lift an edge to peek), rotate 90 degrees to create a great-looking cross-hatched pattern. After you flip the vegetables, no need to rotate because that's the side that will be down.
Second, make sure to oil your grate or your vegetables to keep them from sticking. If you use an oil-based marinade, that'll probably be enough.
Now, let's take a look at a few vegetables:
Sheesh.