leek wrote:Can I put the whole thing under the underhang, and not worry too much about melting the plastic with the starter? It would be on the bottom of the grill itself then, and well beyond 5 feet from the overhang, but I know flames and heat shoots up. If I need to leave the starter beyond the overhang, do I have to put it on cinderblocks, or can it sit right on the 1/4 inch cement board?
BadgerDave wrote:leek wrote:Can I put the whole thing under the underhang, and not worry too much about melting the plastic with the starter? It would be on the bottom of the grill itself then, and well beyond 5 feet from the overhang, but I know flames and heat shoots up. If I need to leave the starter beyond the overhang, do I have to put it on cinderblocks, or can it sit right on the 1/4 inch cement board?
I'd leave it right under the underhang. If you want to make yourself feel better get the chimney really going with a full load and hold your thermometer right under the underhang. Or just feel the overhang with your hand; if it's very hot then you know you have a potential problem. But I doubt you will. I think you'll be surprised at how much heat dissipates.
JMO,
Dave
JoelF wrote:New favorite chef's bite: after slicing up a nice fatty brisket, scrape all the fat, burnt crust bits and meat shreds into a pile of brisket butter. Spread on a Trisket with a bit of picked red onion.
Think of it as Texas Nduja
pinkpajamas wrote:I just did my first ever smoke, in a WSM I bought at a rummage sale. Super stoked to make pork shoulder, which we enjoyed on brioche buns from West Town Bakery and a simple slaw.
ronnie_suburban wrote: What kind of fuel did you use?
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lougord99 wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote: What kind of fuel did you use?
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I think it has been a long time since we discussed where to get lump hardwood. The Cowboy hardwood I have been getting is very small pieces. I don't know if that is from poor handling or just the way Cowboy is doing it. Any suggestions on where to get good lump charcoal?
Resisting the 42 double entendres that immediately cum to mind. Simply said, your BBQ Bologna is a beaut.ronnie_suburban wrote:After it "blossomed," I sliced it into quarter-inch slabs and created a little DIY Sandwich Bar
ronnie_suburban wrote:Got ahold of some prime beef ribs and decided to take advantage of this absolutely gorgeous day . . .
G Wiv wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Got ahold of some prime beef ribs and decided to take advantage of this absolutely gorgeous day . . .
Last week a big bronze glorious BBQ Bologna, today thick, meaty perfection bronto beef ribs. What's next on the Ronnie_S outdoor cooking agenda, spinning fire kissed goats and dancing angels?
ronnie_suburban wrote:Ribs, bonus sausage (a la smokestack), arugula salad with farmers market tomato, corn on the cob, Topo Chico
G Wiv wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Ribs, bonus sausage (a la smokestack), arugula salad with farmers market tomato, corn on the cob, Topo Chico
Speaking of bonus sausage, I'd be lying if I said those spare ribs didn't make me more than slightly tumescent. Corn looks terrific as well. Nice all around, very nice!
Gypsy Boy wrote:It is such wonderful phrasemaking as "perfectly taut and plump" that makes me rue the demise of the banner....
Gypsy Boy wrote:Well, then. I nominate the aforementioned phrase which, in and of itself, might be accurately described as perfectly taut and plump.
MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:Has anyone bought a smoked ham and then smoked it a second time? Saw this on AmazingRibs.com and I'm intrigued.
ronnie_suburban wrote:MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:Has anyone bought a smoked ham and then smoked it a second time? Saw this on AmazingRibs.com and I'm intrigued.
I've smoked plenty of items that were already smoked and for the most part, I was pleased with the results. Sausages were my favorites but I also did it with a large piece of smoked pork loin and that turned out great, too. Never tried a whole ham, though.
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eating while walking wrote:Never seen a smoke ring go all the way through a rib but it tasted great so that's OK