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These units are all so dang expensive. I cook sausage and bacon and I've been using my WSM with a temp controller to pretty good effect, but it's not convenient and not as precise for those low temps. Out of the 3, I like the Smokin-it with the PID controller and it's got that convection fan...
Kettles can be a little wobbly, but I've never had an issues with the legs and I've had my kettle for 12 or 13 years. I get what you mean, though. There's one in the warehouse at work that was made in the 90's and it doesn't budge, though.
I'd go prime for the most part, but you also have the "upper 2/3rds" choice like Certified Angus Beef, that are generally very close to prime. Also a Creekstone Farm's choice is better than a Sam's prime. It's not always clear cut.
I find I mostly get creosote at the end of a cook when I let the fire die out, or in the case of my WSM when I cut the vents to kill the fire at the end of the cook. So you can run a clean fire during the cook and still get some creosote. It's just going happen regardless, the best you can do...
I tend to just repeatedly build log cabins. Usually two parallel to the firebox and on top two across. Ideally the the two parallel are partially burned down and don't smoke two much. They burn slower because they are sitting in the ash somewhat. My splits are pretty small, though in the...
Someone would have to do some kind of side by side comparison to really put this to rest. I personally don't bother with forming the pellicle. I don't think it matters, but I don't know for sure either. I also see people cold smoke it for ridiculously extended periods of time as well. I...
I also prefer a less dark roux. Probably the once circled or the one to the left in HiJack73's
picture. It also seems to get darker in appearance once I add the trinity. There's a lot of ways to make gumbo. I prefer chicken/andouille, but my andouille is pretty far from authentic as I just...
I'm going to give it another shot next summer. I didn't chill my eat before the 2nd grind and I wasn't getting it really cold enough for the first grind. I'm going to try my food processor, I think next time and go with small batches.
Those look great. My hotdogs came out too tough when I tried to make them. I smeared the hell out of the fat, though. It was all in my grinder head. I'm scared to try again as big a failure as that was. I tried to used a kitchenaid stand mixer as well to mix after two grinds like Chud did...
This time of year the weather can get pretty gloomy and then the daylight savings goes away and it's dark when you get home. Add to that, your both your football teams seasons are barely hovering above if not straight in the toilet. Then the barbecue gets cancelled?! Gotta just hang in...
I've used a cheap turkey roaster to hold briskets. They have as simple dial thermostat, and you can usually dial them into 140 to 150. You have to calibrate it with a thermometer so it's kind of a pain. My oven can be calibrated down to 150 as well.
At some point you may have to toss out the temp and just go by tenderness. I've never had a stall that bad, but if it was extremely dry and the barometric pressure was very low maybe that can happen. Are you at a high elevation? That can raise the boiling point and you'll never reach the same...
I have no idea. Maybe someone with a reverse flow can chime in but I've seen briskets off reverse flow pit with great fat rendering. I've gotten decent fat render even on my WSM which has very little airflow, but it just seems more effortless on my Franklin pit. What I would do is start off...
Part of what renders that fat better is the convection that a traditional offset gives you. Also, higher heat renders fat better. But I'm sure people do it in reverse flows fine. Might take some slightly different approach. Something like the boat method helps because you are leaving the...
I've eaten beef sausages at bbq joints all over Texas and you'll find them sometimes with that more crumbly texture and greasy, and they still are damn good.
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