Several years ago, after dating my girlfriend for about 3 months, we were invited to her parents' house for a New Year's Eve dinner in a mid-sized town in northern Indiana. This is typically a pretty marquis meal for this family and its' relatives - king crab, chicken, and bacon-wrapped filets. I wasn't nervous, as I had met the parents twice before (very nice people) although none of the extended relatives. I was surprised, though, when I was asked if I'd help with the grill duties while the family steamed the crab inside.
"Sure!" I replied, although my brain was processing the fact that a) it was pitch black and about 10 degrees outside before wind chill, b) I had never seen this grill before, c) I didn't have a coat or shoes to negotiate my way to a gas grill on an ice-covered deck 30 feet from the house and d) I did not have my knife roll which I always pack with an instant-read, kosher salt, a vial of peppercorns, and extra tongs.
I was presented with the filets - very nice cuts of beef butcher wrapped with bacon and tied appropriately. Then I was handed a zip bag of chicken breasts that had been sulking in a store-bought teryaki marinade overnight and a box of matches. I was also offered the father's oversized coat and boots to temper the elements. He's a 5X. I'm a 44 regular.
The grill was a disaster. After I finally got it lit, a good 60% of the burners were so caked in crud I knew they'd never produce enough heat to sear any protein. I scrubbed the grates as best I could with a metal handled brush until I could almost see metal. I stumbled inside in size 15 boots and cranked up the oven, because there was no way there was going to be enough room on the grill to finish 8 filets and 10 white meat chicken breasts. The propane tank snugged up to the underside of the grill was about the size of a Foster's Lager can - its' combustible volume a complete mystery.
I marked the filets and moved them outside the roughly 6 X 6 area of the grill that was "hot". I marked the chicken, flipping with a not-so-trusty metal spatula, and got those inside to the oven. I finished the filets by feel and when I felt I had gotten them to what I thought was about 125/130 or so I pulled them and clumsily skated my way to the inside door to cover and rest them. I left the grill on to possibly burn off the charred years (?) of misery clinging to the grates. Out came the chicken.
When we all sat down and I scanned the table, trying desperately to remember the names of the relatives I had met very briefly with next to no success, I still felt pretty good about the steaks and chicken. I was nearly clicking my heels under the table proudly. The platter was passed and everyone tucked into their meals after grace.
"This isn't done enough" quipped my girlfriend's brother after his first cut into the filet. Horrified, I craned my neck over others' plates to get a glimpse of what was sure to be a beet red rare inside of a 7 or 8oz filet. Instead, what I saw was a perfectly crusted and grilled hunk of tender meat, slightly pink and not a bullseye in sight. "Mine either", said the Dad.
I was crushed. I wanted to blurt out that they were perfectly done, but I knew I didn't stand a chance against a roomful of near-strangers. As it turns out, the whole family minus my girlfriend eats beef medium well, a detail I probably should have inquired about before I plowed out into the snow. Shamefully, I donned the enormous coat and boat-sized boots and headed back out into the cold to refire the steaks while the rest of the family inhaled the crab legs. It was cold and dark. Fuck. I threw them back on the grates, not without a little bit of malice in my heart, until they were cooked almost grey through and portions of the the bacon was ready to disintegrate into black powder. "Here's your medium-well - you can't bitch about this", I thought.
The good news is that the girl and I will celebrate our 7th wedding anniversary in May, and maybe just as importantly, her loving and wonderful family is learning to eat beef off my (meticulously clean) grills at a perfect medium rare. Buncha' heathens. I love'em.