Organic NZ

How to make a charbecue

What could be better than a summer barbie with family, friends, and neighbours?

To Dennis Enright, the answer is obvious: switch out the barbecue for a charbecue. “It’s a lot of fun.” You’ll still cook up your kai, and you’ll also make biochar (see sidebar). You’ll enjoy the usual social benefits, plus you’ll have a ready-made conversation starter. “By themselves charbecues are small potatoes, but they’re a great way to connect people to issues,” he says – issues like soil regeneration and carbon sequestration.

FROM BARBECUE TO CHARBECUE

A charbecue differs from a barbecue by inhibiting the flow of air through fuel. When barbecuing, you burn charcoal in the presence of oxygen and get ash; when charbecuing, you heat wood, burning off its volatile components. Biochar’s the result.

To make

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Organic NZ

Organic NZ2 min readDiet & Nutrition
The Cost Of Convenience
My real-world friends are complaining about the price of food at the supermarket being too high. I don’t preach to my friends (that’s why I still have them) but they get from my lack of sympathy that I don’t agree with them. a) I don’t consider most
Organic NZ7 min readPopular Culture & Media Studies
Making Good Ethics A Viable Business
For more than five years, Wholegrain Organics had a commercial kitchen, bread bakery, café, and retail outlet on The Square in Palmerston North, and its team ran food technology and hospitality classes at local schools, under the Hands-On Food banner
Organic NZ3 min read
Community Garden
Now in its seventh year, Farmers’ Market Week is an annual celebration that highlights the vital role farmers’ markets play in our nation’s food system. With fun events, contests, activities, and more, the week helps to boost market attendance and vi

Related