1- Understand your barbecue.
Whether you’re a traditional smoky coal pit ‘cuer or a streamlined gas blazing heat freak; you need to understand the tool you’re working with to get the best results. Specifically: locate the different areas of your grill. Every barbecue has hotspots and hotterspots. With a gas barbecue you’ll often find that the most intense heat is towards the back of the grill, though it can vary and you may find that one particular side gets hotter than another. The benefit, though, is that these hotspots will remain consistent so you can discover the different areas over multiple cooks. With a coal barbecue the spread of the coals will affect this so you’ll have to wing it a bit, and work it out each time.
Once you know where the hotspots are, you can distribute your food accordingly. Remember: you want to ensure everything is cooked through, without overdoing it (we’ll come back to this shortly). Keep a good rotation to ensure everything is evenly cooked and nothing is ready sooner or later than anything else. Use it to stall for time – if a couple of sausages are ready move them to the cooler area to stay nicely warm until the chicken’s done (another advantage of cooking with gas is that you can adjust the intensity of the burners, or even turn one of them off, to create a simple warming area).