Im doing a smoke for 10 family and friends on my new Smoke Vault on Sunday and figured i would break it in today and get some practice. Went with a rack of baby back slathered in mustard and my favorite dry rub as well as a saugage fatty with mushrooms, onion, green and red bell peppers, marinara sauce and mozzarella cheese and some ABT's. The fatty turned out really well. Next time ill use more cheese and probably finish it off with some marinara on top but it was really fricken good. The ABT's may rank right up there as some of the best food Ive ever eaten. I seeded and veined jalepenos and the sliced them in half so we could make 2 out of each pepper. I filled them with a mix of cream cheese, cilantro, 4 mexican cheese blend, pepper and then wrapped the each in a half slice of jimmy dean premium bacon. Jesus Crimmeny those things are good. Very little heat but exploding with flavor.
The ribs on the other hand, sadly, came out rubbery. The flavor was good, the bark was great but they just didn't fall away from the bone as the do when i do them on my webber grill. After years of practice i really was feeling like a rib expert using indirect heat and smoke chips on my gasser and thought it was time to move on to the smoker. Ive got to admit i was pretty saddened by my first effort but am excited to give it another shot on Sunday for the whole family. In the early stages I was having a hard time keeping the temperature steady in the 225-250 range and had it up as high as 295 or 300 at different points. About an hour in I finally felt like i got a grip on the temperature and was able to keep it at around 240 for the remainder of the smoke. I did employ the 2-2-1 as I always do with baby backs but they were still really chewy. Do ya'll think that would be attributable to the innapropriately high temps I was using in the first hour or so? I really thought when i took the foil off I was going to see falling off the bone meat and it just wasnt there.
Oh well, fatty was good, ribs were adequate and tomorrow is another day!
Sorry for no Qview! My girlfiend is on a 50 day tour of Europe and absconded with the digital camera.
The ribs on the other hand, sadly, came out rubbery. The flavor was good, the bark was great but they just didn't fall away from the bone as the do when i do them on my webber grill. After years of practice i really was feeling like a rib expert using indirect heat and smoke chips on my gasser and thought it was time to move on to the smoker. Ive got to admit i was pretty saddened by my first effort but am excited to give it another shot on Sunday for the whole family. In the early stages I was having a hard time keeping the temperature steady in the 225-250 range and had it up as high as 295 or 300 at different points. About an hour in I finally felt like i got a grip on the temperature and was able to keep it at around 240 for the remainder of the smoke. I did employ the 2-2-1 as I always do with baby backs but they were still really chewy. Do ya'll think that would be attributable to the innapropriately high temps I was using in the first hour or so? I really thought when i took the foil off I was going to see falling off the bone meat and it just wasnt there.
Oh well, fatty was good, ribs were adequate and tomorrow is another day!
Sorry for no Qview! My girlfiend is on a 50 day tour of Europe and absconded with the digital camera.