Some of the links on this forum allow SMF, at no cost to you, to earn a small commission when you click through and make a purchase. Let me know if you have any questions about this.
Usually 20-23 for 20 pounds or 40-45 for a 40 bag. The 40 pound bag of pit boss competition blend is on for 30 right now, so that's an option, although I've never used that before.
Well, I heard back from Canawick. See below for their answer when I asked about their product (which is labelled as hardwood, not a blend) being used for cooking.
Hi Richard,
Although not intended for cooking purposes, we are aware that some people use our wood pellets for cooking and...
Oops, my mistake, thanks for that. I didn't expand the quote section :)
I do have a canadian tire/home depot. All are 40 or more for Pit Boss 40 pound bags. It is canadian tire who are selling the 40 pound bags at 5.99 that prompted my question regarding the canawick product for smoking...
He and I have spoken and he is awesome.
Unfortunately, me being in Canada and the cost of shipping will likely nullify and potential savings.
My main goal would be to find validity in the cheap ones I linked (if there is any). I know of a few people who use them but that doesn't make it safe...
I was thinking the same thing, although I am intrigued to see that they are posting on their site that they are approved for cooking use. Not something you'd publicize openly if not fairly safe.
As for 45 bucks, plus tax, for a 40 pound bag, that is the cheapest option for cooking pellets in...
Doing some cheese today since it's cold out and plan to do an actual cook on real food this weekend :)
As an aside, anyone ever use these for smoking? I know we are to avoid heating pellets due to potential softwoods and fillers, but these are stated to be pure hardwood and also safe for...
Good call, the 3-inch gap is quite important to get a more accurate reading. I love the method I saw where someone cut a potato in half and stuck the sensor through it and then sat the potato on the rack. Make positioning the sensor super easy
Those times you mention were on the downswing, 232/231 is the lowest it got during an hour+ long 225 run. So on its way down, it turns on at 224 (while still dropping) and bottoms out at 232/231 (MES 219) before its upswing begins. Total heat swing is 37/35 degrees on the 225 run. 33/33 degrees...
Well what got me here was my mes being set to 275 and then not turning off, even when it was at 403 and counting. My swings now go as high as 44 over projected (269 when set to 225) but the swings are much more modest at the 205 temp
Thanks Bear,
I've read that post and will use it when cooking, but wanted to get a general idea how the mes performed on its own with the new sensor. Seems like the sensor did the trick and 205 is going to be my primary setting.
Appreciate the feedback all, cheers
I got around to doing 2 sets of temp runs to get an idea of where my MES actually runs. I did a 225 and a 205 (on the MES) with it empty. I was running a thermopro dual probe setup for reference. Below recorded runs after it had done 3-4 full cycles and “levelled off” internally.
225 Run...
I have that model and it comes with 6 racks, an integrated wired temp probe, a sausage hook, and a cover. Having it come with the 2 extra racks is great and saved me a few bucks. I would have liked the RF remote given how far it's range it compared to the bluetooth (which I don't use as a...
That is very impressive. I will have to sit down and get some concrete numbers later today when I get home and find out exactly where my numbers will be. I was running on rack 5, then 4, then 3, and the range was only slightly improved with each higher rack. I'll make a spreadsheet of probe...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.