Once the timber is thoroughly charred, it is a wrapped in a layer of carbon that is formed within the burning process. This layer helps the timber become highly resistant to water compared to the raw timber and essentially renders the charred timber as waterproof.
It stops it from rotting (as quickly as raw timber).
You got it wrong. To cook a steak during log cabin construction, you actually cook it in the ground. No precharring necessary. Marinate, season, prepare the earth, which is mostly just digging a nice firepit. Get a nice hot fire going, get some coals. Then you wrap the steak up nice and tight, and put it in the coals. Cover with more coals, and cook depending on how well you want it done.
So, in short. The steaks aren’t charred before being pounded into the ground. Pound the ground, then char the bar, heat the meat. Easy, delicious.
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