Category: Outdoor Kitchens

Outdoor Kitchens

Todd Avery Lenahan Founded Aba Design Studio Las Vegas

Todd Avery Lenahan Founded Aba Design Studio Las Vegas

Todd-Avery Lenahan is an exceptionally skilled interior designer with more than two decades in the field of interior design. In 1999, he founded ABA Design Studio, Las Vegas after leaving his job as Principal of Design and Interior Architecture for Walt Disney Imagineering at its worldwide headquarters in Burbank California. An award winning designer, Todd-Avery Lenahan established ABA Design Studio as the generation leader in the global field of commercial interior design. The clients of ABA Design Studio, Las Vegas include luxury restaurants, casinos, resorts, corporate offices, hotels and entertainment complexes all over the world and his work is illustrative of ABA’s breadth of design commissions across multiple disciplines.

Todd-Avery Lenahan, Las Vegas has also worked with some of the best known five star hotels in the world including Ritz-Carlton Hotels, Four Seasons, and Mandarin Oriental. These hotels have used ABA’s fresh approach to design standards to enhance their venues with ABA’s imaginative, exclusive designs. Todd-Avery Lenahan brings a perfect blend of business savvy and elegant artistry to their hospitality designs that have solidified ABA’s reputation as a tour-de-force in international design circles. His design work stands superior to that of his peers for the striking interplay of classism paired with a modern rationale. Todd was awarded Designer of the Year by Boutique Design magazine in 2008. ABA Design Studio was also ranked as one of the best Design Giant in the industry’s annual ranking of its 100 top firms.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZ9yYpUooiw[/youtube]

Before joining Disney Development Corporation in Orlando, Florida, Todd-Avery received his degree in Architecture from the University of Texas at Austin. He was awarded the Alpha Rho Chi Bronze Medal in Architecture and the Dean’s Award as Most Outstanding Graduate. Todd-Avery Lenahan, Las Vegas is also the author of PLACES, a compilation of stories about the making of some of the most works in ABA’s impressive portfolio. This book captures the noteworthy elegance and prowess of ABA’s interior designs through stunning photography and lyrical storytelling. Building upon his longstanding passion for academia, Lenahan served as an Adjunct Professor at the University of Nevada – Las Vegas School of Architecture from 2000 to 2002. To learn more about Todd-Avery Lenahan and ABA Design Studio, please visit abalv.com today.

Article Source: sooperarticles.com/home-improvement-articles/interior-design-articles/todd-avery-lenahan-founded-aba-design-studio-las-vegas-518345.html

Author: Wilson Thomas

What Features Make A Good Charcoal Grill

What Features Make A Good Charcoal Grill

By Paul Yates

It was my father who bought the family their first charcoal grill way back in 1974. I remember it well, we bought it whilst camping in France and we’d taken some advice from one of our French neighbors on the camp ground. Looking back I have fond memories of that grill, it cooked many a great meal but because it was only made out of steel, eventually it warped and had to be thrown on the scrap heap.

Having smiled at all the fond memories it did of course have it’s flaws as well as it’s star qualities. When cooking over open coals it can be really difficult to control the level of heat or indeed any flames that can sometime appear from time to time. There’s two ways that you control the flames, one is to lift the food away from the coals so that less heat gets to the food, less fat melts into the coals and so the flames die down. The other way is to starve the fire of oxygen or in simple terms put a lid on it. This will have the desired effect but it won’t effect the heat too much so even with a lid you still stand the risk of charring your food.

Having a lid on a barbecue does have it’s advantages but for me the lid really comes into full force when we are indirect cooking. We’ll come onto that later and just to finish the point on heat control, for me it’s about being able to adjust the height at which the cooking rack is away from the coals. Whenever you’re grill becomes ready to cook on, this is the time when the coals will be most hot so at this point it’s good to have the cooking grid ‘high’ above the coals so I always look for a grill that has the facility to adjust the height of the cooking grate. That said, to this day I’ve never found a grill that has sufficient adjustment.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ek5sNmrs1mM[/youtube]

The next thing to think about is what style of cooking do you want to do? For example, our first family grill had a hinge at the legs so you could either use it as a traditional grill with the coals underneath the food or you could turn it through ninety degrees so that the coals are to one side and using it this way you could attach a rotisserie unit. If spit roasting is your thing then this is definitely a factor worth considering however I have to say that I haven’t recently seen a grill like the one that my family had. I still have a similar one made by Le Creuset but sadly it’s no longer manufactured – probably down to cost.

Let’s get back to the indirect cooking. If this is your style of BBQ then there’s a couple of features over and above the lid that I would consider.

1. Think carefully about the size of the cooking area. When cooking indirectly you effectively need part of the cooking area left without food on it because directly under this area will be your coals so if you like to cook for a lot of people or if you are planning on cooking turkey, you’re going to need a pretty sizable cooking area.

2. Have you got the facility to do indirectly? Many grills have a separator to keep the coals clear from the food, it sound like an obvious thing but double check this point.

3. Has the grill got vents top and bottom? You’ll need this feature in order to ensure that otherwise you won’t be able to keep the fire going.

About the Author: In addition to his knowledge about

charcoal barbecue grills

, Paul Yates has perfected how to

build a brick BBQ

and written many

gas grill reviews

.

Source:

isnare.com

Permanent Link:

isnare.com/?aid=757029&ca=Cooking

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