Dragon Slide

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Posted by admin | Posted in outdoor toys | Posted on 12-06-2009

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Dragon Slide
Dragon Slide

Barbecued Dragon Chicken Wings

Barbecued dragon chicken wings are really easy to make, and you eat them with your fingers. My favourite type of barbecue food! To save time I make the sauce for them the night before and keep it in the fridge until it's needed.

Serves: 6

Preparation: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 25 to 30 minutes

Ingredients

* 18 chicken wings
* Oil for cooking

For the sauce

* 9 fl oz (250ml) of cider vinegar
* 1 tablespoon of coarse sea salt
* 1 teaspoon of freshly ground black pepper
* ! teaspoon of paprika
* I small, roasted red pepper chopped
* freshly ground black pepper to taste
* 9 fl oz (60ml) of vegetable oil
* 2 tablespoons of Worcester sauce
* 2 tablespoons of lemon juice
* 1/2 teaspoon of dried chilli flakes

1. Place all of the ingredients into a blender and mix well together. Pour the sauce into a jug or bottle.

2. Rub the chicken wings with the oil and cook over a hot grill for about 10 to 15 minutes. Stir the sauce and drizzle it over the wings every few minutes.

3. Turn over and repeat for the other side. The sauce will separate and so will need stirring frequently prior to drizzling.

4. Serve your barbecued spicey chicken wings while they're hot.

Tip: Use a digital thermometer for cooking Barbecue Chicken

A basic digital thermometer is designed to take a temperature reading in about 10 seconds and cannot stay in the food during cooking. Remove the chicken from the heat and slide the thermometer into the thickest part of chicken pieces or into the breast on whole birds. Check the temperature reading.

If the temperature is too low, remove the thermometer and put the chicken back on the heat to finish cooking. If the temperature is right, the chicken is ready to eat.

About the Author

I hope you enjoyed this tasty barbecue chicken recipe. If you would like more tantalizing recipe ideas for your next barbecue, head over to Barbecue Party for hundreds of varied and delicious BBQ recipes and much more. They have a wealth of how-to's, hints, tips, BBQ grills and reviews, with a BBQ blog that is updated daily.

How to build a bearde dragon enclosure?

can someone tell me how i can build one?i want to make a wooden one with sliding glass doors but theyre way too expensive online. i never built anything before so please tell me step by step how to and how much it would cost in total. thank you

I can't give you an easy step by step here as Yahoo doesn't allow enough characters in the answers to truly do so. If you do not already posses the tools and skills necessary you find that it costs you more to invest in what you need and materials then it costs to buy one. That said basically you need to build a box.

If your skill level is low a box with butt joints may be your best option. I prefer to use lock miters on the carcass of the box to reinforce the joint and to make a clean miter when using laminated plywood. A simple joint to cut that will work for you is a rabbit. You will need to cut a rabbit or dado for the back to sit in as well. I make the carcass from a variety of materials but apple ply will work well. I typically use 3/4" for large enclosures. Poplar will work well for the face frame. I laminate two thickness's of 3/4" poplar together. Then I cut a rabbit equal to the thickness of the carcass material in the back. This allows the frame to slip partially into the carcass and eliminates sag. You can cut a dado into the face frame for the track to sit in or mount the track directly to the inside of the frame. I make my own tracks but if you don't have the equipment then it is more economically feasible to buy them. The back can be of 1/4" luan or apple ply and mounted in the rabbit or dado you cut. I drill holes approximately 3" up from the bottom spaced 1" o.c. and staggered . I typically drill 3 rows the width of the enclosure inset 1". Use PVA glue such as tightbond 2 in all joints, for making and installing the face frame, and installing the track if a wood track is used.

Veneer the inside of the structure with white melamine or laminate of your choosing. This is available at Lowes in 4' x 8' sheets. Use contact cement to install it per manufacture instructions. Caulk the seams with aquarium grade silicone. I pre-cut glass templates out of 1/4" hard board. The glass panes should overlap each other by 2". Sometimes I cut my own glass, sometimes I have the glass shop do it. For one cage if you have the skill you may save a little cutting it yourself. Regardless use the templates or provide them to the glass shop. I recommend 1/4" tempered glass with sanded edges.

If you use a pre-veneered plywood such as apple ply you can stain, paint, and top coat it with a material of your choosing on the exterior. Total cost will vary greatly depending on the materials used and locality. Other factors such as size and mistakes will effect the cost. Obviously investing in tools will greatly increase your costs. On materials I would figure between $180-$350 depending on the size of the enclosure, how exotic you make it, and what materials you use as well as where you get them.

Dragon Slide

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