There is something primal about cooking over embers. No roaring flames, no rush. Just steady heat, glowing coals and the slow transformation of food over time.
Asado cooking embraces this simplicity. It is less about intensity and more about control, patience and depth of flavour. Done well, it produces food that is rich, tender and deeply connected to the fire itself.
What is Asado Cooking?
Asado is a traditional South American style of cooking over fire, most closely associated with Argentina.
Rather than cooking directly over flames, food is typically cooked over embers. This creates a more even, consistent heat that allows for slower cooking and greater control.
Key characteristics of asado cooking include:
Cooking over embers rather than open flame
Slower, more controlled heat
Larger cuts of meat cooked over time
A focus on simplicity and flavour
It is a method rooted in patience, where the fire is prepared first and the cooking follows.
Why This Method Works So Well
Cooking over embers delivers a different kind of heat.
Instead of aggressive direct heat, embers provide:
Even heat distribution across the cooking area
Better control for longer cooks
Reduced risk of burning or flare ups
Deeper flavour development over time
This makes asado ideal for larger cuts and dishes that benefit from slower cooking.
How to Cook This Way on the Grill Box System
Asado cooking is all about managing embers, not flames.
Start by building your fire in a controlled way, allowing the charcoal to burn down until you have a bed of glowing embers. This is your primary heat source.
The Grill Box system allows you to take this further.
Using the Konro as your base, you can generate consistent heat, while the Ember Maker tray and stand allows you to produce additional embers and move them exactly where they are needed.
Adding the Asado frame introduces adjustable height, giving you precise control over how close your food sits to the embers. This is essential when working with larger cuts or longer cooking times.
Together, this setup mirrors traditional asado cooking, but with far greater flexibility and control.
How to Get Started
Asado cooking begins before the food even touches the grill.
Build your fire and allow it to burn down into embers
Spread the embers evenly to create your cooking zone
Position your cooking surface at the appropriate height
Cook slowly, adjusting heat by adding or moving embers
This is a method where preparation defines the outcome.
What to Cook
Asado cooking is particularly well suited to:
Large cuts of beef, such as ribeye or sirloin
Lamb, cooked slowly over steady heat
Chicken, finished with crisp skin over embers
Sausages and thicker cuts that benefit from even cooking
Vegetables that soften and caramelise over time
It is about letting the ingredient cook fully, without rushing.
Mastering the Technique
The key to asado cooking is managing your embers.
Instead of controlling a flame, you control:
The quantity of embers
Their position beneath the food
The distance between food and heat
You can introduce fresh embers to increase heat, or spread them out to reduce intensity. This gives you a level of control that is both simple and highly effective.
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The Grill Box Fire Cooking Guide – A Guide to Cooking Over Embers
What is Asado Cooking?
A Guide to Cooking Over Embers
There is something primal about cooking over embers. No roaring flames, no rush. Just steady heat, glowing coals and the slow transformation of food over time.
Asado cooking embraces this simplicity. It is less about intensity and more about control, patience and depth of flavour. Done well, it produces food that is rich, tender and deeply connected to the fire itself.
What is Asado Cooking?
Asado is a traditional South American style of cooking over fire, most closely associated with Argentina.
Rather than cooking directly over flames, food is typically cooked over embers. This creates a more even, consistent heat that allows for slower cooking and greater control.
Key characteristics of asado cooking include:
It is a method rooted in patience, where the fire is prepared first and the cooking follows.
Why This Method Works So Well
Cooking over embers delivers a different kind of heat.
Instead of aggressive direct heat, embers provide:
This makes asado ideal for larger cuts and dishes that benefit from slower cooking.
How to Cook This Way on the Grill Box System
Asado cooking is all about managing embers, not flames.
Start by building your fire in a controlled way, allowing the charcoal to burn down until you have a bed of glowing embers. This is your primary heat source.
The Grill Box system allows you to take this further.
Using the Konro as your base, you can generate consistent heat, while the Ember Maker tray and stand allows you to produce additional embers and move them exactly where they are needed.
Adding the Asado frame introduces adjustable height, giving you precise control over how close your food sits to the embers. This is essential when working with larger cuts or longer cooking times.
Together, this setup mirrors traditional asado cooking, but with far greater flexibility and control.
How to Get Started
Asado cooking begins before the food even touches the grill.
This is a method where preparation defines the outcome.
What to Cook
Asado cooking is particularly well suited to:
It is about letting the ingredient cook fully, without rushing.
Mastering the Technique
The key to asado cooking is managing your embers.
Instead of controlling a flame, you control:
You can introduce fresh embers to increase heat, or spread them out to reduce intensity. This gives you a level of control that is both simple and highly effective.
Pro Tips for Better Results
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Asado is about patience as much as technique.
Build Your Grill Box Setup
Explore the full system
Explore the Konro
Add flexibility with the Asado frame
Take control of embers
Continue Your Fire Cooking Journey
To deepen your understanding of fire cooking, explore:
Each approach builds on the same principle. Control the fire, and you control the result.
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The Grill Box Fire Cooking Guide – How to Choose the Right Konro Grill
The Grill Box Fire Cooking Guide – What is a Konro Grill