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  2. The 8 Best Meat Thermometers for Grilling Your Most ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/8-best-meat-thermometers-grilling...

    Cheyenne Wu. TOTAL: 86/100 Unlike most digital meat thermometers on this list, the ThermoWorks Smoke does have a companion app, but you don't necessarily need it to monitor your grilling.

  3. Meat thermometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meat_thermometer

    A meat thermometer with various cooking temperatures denoted for various meat types. The probe can be inserted into the meat before starting cooking, and cooking continued until the desired internal temperature is reached. Alternatively the meat can be cooked for a certain time and taken out of the oven, and the temperature checked before serving.

  4. AOL reviewed: This AI-powered pellet smoker produces ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/brisk-it-origin-580-grill...

    The Brisk It Origin 580 is a pellet smoker, designed for cooking at low temperatures for long periods of time. It has a temperature range of 165 to 500°F, and unlike gas or charcoal grills, you ...

  5. George Foreman Grill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Foreman_Grill

    The fajita grill had been promoted at industry trade shows in the early 1990s, but garnered little interest. [4] The slanted grill concept was pitched by Tsann Kuen to Salton, Inc. After one year, and several trade shows, Salton sent samples of the grill to George Foreman's colleagues, who then sent the grill to Foreman to test.

  6. Grilling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grilling

    Stove-top pan grilling is an indoor cooking process that uses a grill pan — similar to a frying pan but with raised ridges to emulate the function or look of a gridiron. In pan grilling, heat is applied directly to the food by the raised ridges and indirectly through the heat radiating off the lower pan surface by the stove-top flame.

  7. Doneness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doneness

    Before cooking, the iron atom is in a +2 oxidation state and bound to a dioxygen molecule (O 2), giving raw meat its red color. As meat cooks, the iron atom loses an electron, moving to a +3 oxidation state and coordinating with a water molecule (H 2 O), which causes the meat to turn brown.