- May 11, 2020
- 12
- 1
Some friends of ours recently turned vegetarian (thoughts and prayers) and gave us their smoker. It's a CharBroil vertical propane smoker (I'm guessing it's the 595).
We used it for the first time this weekend (smoked a London Broil and some chicken breasts). They turned out nice but I have a couple questions for the group...
I preheated the smoker to 225. Of course, when I put in the meat, I had to open the door and lost a lot of heat. My smoker never got above 225 even though I had the flame on high. Is this normal? How do you regulate the temperature aside from the propane controls?
I had to replenish the water and wood 3 times over 2 hours. How frequently do you check and replenish?
I used a Weber iGrill Bluetooth meat probe and the meat cooked quicker than what I anticipated after reading a bunch online. Do you cook by time or temperature and are there general guidelines for time based on pounds of food? For instance, sausages take 3 hours while the chicken breasts took 1.5. That sounds weird based on the size of a sausage vs a chicken breast.
I saw where you can wrap the meat in foil or butcher paper and store in an empty cooler to rest and keep warm. Can you do that for every meat (chicken, pork, beef, etc) or just certain meats or cuts?
Thanks.
We used it for the first time this weekend (smoked a London Broil and some chicken breasts). They turned out nice but I have a couple questions for the group...
I preheated the smoker to 225. Of course, when I put in the meat, I had to open the door and lost a lot of heat. My smoker never got above 225 even though I had the flame on high. Is this normal? How do you regulate the temperature aside from the propane controls?
I had to replenish the water and wood 3 times over 2 hours. How frequently do you check and replenish?
I used a Weber iGrill Bluetooth meat probe and the meat cooked quicker than what I anticipated after reading a bunch online. Do you cook by time or temperature and are there general guidelines for time based on pounds of food? For instance, sausages take 3 hours while the chicken breasts took 1.5. That sounds weird based on the size of a sausage vs a chicken breast.
I saw where you can wrap the meat in foil or butcher paper and store in an empty cooler to rest and keep warm. Can you do that for every meat (chicken, pork, beef, etc) or just certain meats or cuts?
Thanks.