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Hey yall, I need some expertise. We are hauling the camper to the lake Friday evening for Memorial weekend. I will be throwing a 10 pound butt on the electric smoker about 9 or 10 that night after I work 6am to 6pm. Has anyone ever injected and dry rubbed their butts 24 hours in advance? I know...
So those of you who have dry pulled pork when you reheat it for leftovers. When I cook, I'll keep the butt in a pan fat side down to collect the juices, of course you can use a drip pan too. But when I pull the meat I'll put them in small shallow containers, dump some of the rendered fat into...
Man I'm looking forward to this. Ribs are my thang. Pulled pork for the wife. Being able to look a large quantity without buying or building a three thousand dollar pit, and doing it the old way
This is what I was wanting to do. Looks like I could do two to three butts and six racks of ribs. Would use quite a bit of wood coals to keep it up lol
We have so many walnut trees it's not even funny. Since you burn em green do you think a couple 55 gallon drums worth filled with wood is okay for a rib smoking session? Or should I prepare for a lot more
Yea I ws contemplating since walnut and mesquite produce a heavy smoke flavor in an offset, if they are already burned down to coals if the heavy bitter smoke done went away. What would you think? Thanks for sharing!
We have walnut trees everywhere. So walnut is known to not be the best wood to smoke with, however if you burn it off in the burn barrel first I wonder if the coals left underneath would be good for the cooking process. We have walnut and some mulberry, I dont want to hack up the mulberry yet...
It sounds awesome. How was the smoke flavor, or the flavor in general compared to an offset? I'm an old school guy even though I'm 33. If I'm babysitting a bbqer for hours I'd rather be making and shoveling coals rather than adding a log lol. Nothing wrong with it though.
You just had a flat metal or wooden top on it? And how far do you think the grate was above the coals? Plus, did you have holes on the sides for air flow coming in, or just where you shoveled coals in?
Hey guys, I read Myron Mixon's BBQ Rules book and I decided I'm going to give the old school southern style of cooking a try. Which includes a cinder block or brick rectangle pit that you feed coals from a burn barrel, direct heat method. Anyway like anything in my life I try to take something...
You guys weren't mistaking. I have an older style of pit boss where the dial has smoke,, 200, 225, 250, 300 etc. I had it on 200 and my thermometer read 273. So when I cooked at 225 it was running over 300. Lol
Thanks everyone for the advice. When I cooked on the offset they'd come out immaculate, but the pellet grill has the burner directly underneath so I cooks differently. All we want is two slabs of ribs so when I use the easier method they're charred to heck lol. Some brown sugar yes, I might need...
Anyone else get charred burnt ribs on their pellet grill? No matter how low of heat or how I do them, they burn on the crust because of the heat being right below. Pit boss pellet grill, closed baffle.
Well I'm new on here. I got this trailer that belonged to my great uncle and I acquired it years ago. I brought it in to give it a good new fresh paint job. The grill on the left has a lever that raises the charcoal bed up and down. Those parts plus the bottom of the grill are rusting, so I will...
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