Best results today...especially on the skin!
I did more googling and came across another Foam thread...so I decided to work it in. This chicken was brined for prolly 20 hours or so in salt and water. I then took it out, pat dry it as much as I could.....and then left it on a rack with a fan blowing on it for about 2 hours. I would rotate the bird every half hour or so. Not sure ill call what I got a full pellicle...but allowing the bird to dry really did wonders for the skin!
Skin wasnt crispy...but it was dried out, and maybe with a little more dry time will get that crispiness that I keep missing. Ended up seasoning with pepper...and a little more salt. Cooked 3 hours 15 minutes.....Im think Ive noticed that the brined chickens take a few minutes longer to cook. The other days non brined chicken cooked in 3 hours....and was reading above 165!!
VERY JUICY AND VERY TASTY! RIBS TOMORROW! I got some good looking spare ribs. Planning the 3-2-1 on them...and gonna use this as the rub procedure
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SO....back to the original post.
I think that my smoker might not give steady and consistent smoke. Im waiting for my damn thermopro thats supposed to be in the mailbox by now. But im thinking that the Amazn pellet tray might be the best way to get steady smoke.
Is there a video or site that explains it? I get that you load it up and light one end....but how do you know how many pellets to put in? I'd rather not buy it...but if I keep seeing blackend instead of ashed wood chips...i think I have to do something.
Nice work on the chicken!!! Something I read about in an Electric Smoker cook book was that cooking chickens and turkey's on a vertical roasting rack helped the skin. It did help me. It didn't solve the issue but it improved the skin and as you can tell every trick counts when you can't get the smoker up over 300F lol.
As for the AMNPS it is roughly that each row (of 3) will give you 3 hours of smoke. Sometimes you get closer to 4 hours depending on a few factors.
The nice thing about using the AMNPS with pellets is that you get a 40 pound bag of pellets for like $20 or less sometimes and it takes FOREVER to burn through 40 pounds of pellets in the AMNPS so you really don't have to worry about cost or using up too many pellets. To me it is better to run a little over on the smoke time than to fall short.
I've used the AMNPS for as little as 30 minutes and had it burn as long as 14 hours when I had a lot of cherry wood pellets (cherry wood is naturally harder to keep light and seems to burn slower in my experience).
I think almost every MES owner here uses an AMNPS.
Some do fine with just putting it inside on the bottom of the MES, others (I'm one of them) go the Mailbox Mod route where we have the AMNPS outside the MES in it's own little compartment. The choice is up to you and will be based on what your preferences and/or what you want to do with your smoking setup.
I went Mailbox Mod so I could mange smoke without needing to open the smoker and to have much greater control over cold smoking, applying smoke for very short times (30min) or very long times (17 hours) again without opening the smoker, and finally I can manage the heat that is added to the smoker by the burning pellets.
I only get about 2 months out of there year here in TX where the temps are just low enough for me to cold smoke Salmon Lox at temps below 65-70F. With the mailbox mod, a 45-50F day outside, and a tray of ice in the MES I can keep at or under 65-70F for my salmon cold smokes :)
So you see why my needs are helped by a mailbox mod where someone in a different area may not have the issue and therefore not need/want the mailbox mod.
I hope this info helps!
