Pitboss smoke setting

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nes227

Newbie
Original poster
May 7, 2020
16
13
hi guys new smoker here. I just bought a pitboss pro. I've grilled in it a couple times so far loving it. Tonight I smoked a beef eye round. I did it using the smoke setting. While smoking i noticed the temp went down to 150. I would put it in cook mode to get it back up. Do people really use the smoke setting or is cooking at a low temp sufficient for smoke flavor. Thanks for your help.
 
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I use the lowest temp/smoke setting almost every time I use mine, depending on what I am cooking will determine how long I leave it on, chicken pu smoke pretty easy big chunks get 3-5 hours if I aint pushed for time, spritzing helps gather more smoke and a smoke tube also helps, everyone is different on the amount of smoke they want, just remember that more smoke is produced at lower temps and the P settings can help make more smoke,be sure to post some pictures of your cooks, they host pictures here so no photo bucket ect needed
 
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the P setting is what you may need to adjust. P mean pause, is the pause in the auger as it feeds the fire pellets. longer the pause the fewer the pellets and v/v. if it set too low there is a flame out risk, too high and you wont be bale to maintain you minimum/low temp. For example on 95 degree sunny days the setting may need to be fairly high to keep temps low (keep the heat from the fire down).

here is a video.

I use a rec tec - they have the same concept. I first noted the need to adjust while my grill was in direct sun and it was hot out. I had it set at 180 and just kept on going up and up. I adjusted the feed and BOOM done. I talked to support and they did tell me if if the feed set too low there is a risk of flame out (no fire).
 
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I can't offer any advice on pellet smokers but wanted to say welcome and best of luck!
 
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Its not fewer pellets its a longer pause between the pellet feed which produces more temp swings which produces more smoke and yes its very safe to smoke below 200 , rule of thumb solid chunks of meat they recommend 145 within 4 hours but nit sure if i every worried about that before lol
 
nes227--yes, welcome, but let me put your mind at ease a bit about smoking and meat safety.
1. There is a legitimate concern that bacteria could be in your meat. Since basically nothing lives over 140F, one should cook their meat before eating it so that ALL of the interior comes to at least 140F.
2. That said, meat sold commercially today has additives that kill bacteria regardless of temperature. The classic ones are sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite. Sodium nitrite has huge financial advantages in that it keeps meat looking pink/red and "fresh" much longer so you needn't worry about commercial meat not having enough of it! (If you're a hunter who cooks fresh kill, disregard most of what I say.)
3. Bacteria don't like it nippy either. Hence, refrigeration was a huge advance in preserving meat. And if you're colder than water's melt point ("freezing the meat") it will essentially last forever.
4. There is also bacteria in the air...think of the breeze wafting over that pile of dog poop in the neighbor's yard...not a lot, but "it's in the air". This the reason we minimize the time meat is in the "danger zone" of 40-140F. The bacteria can land on the surface and multiply (lots of oxygen available) and the preserving effects of the nitric acid breakdown products of the nitrite underneath won't be adequate.
5. But it's a temperature AND time effect. Throwing a cold steak on an 800F grill may prevent any bacteria from landing and growing on the hot (bottom) side but the top side of the meat is still cool to the touch...and your "touch" has plenty of bacteria too. But after a few minutes you're ready to flip the steak and a little later a meat thermometer will show >140F throughout and a few minutes you safely eat the meat...at about 100F. So a good rule is that meat should not reside in the Danger Zone for longer than ~15 minutes. But you can never avoid the Danger Zone completely.
6. It appears then that cold smoking at <140F for hours at a time would be bad then, right? Well long before refrigeration and sodium nitrite, mankind learned that smoke itself has a preservative, bacteria-killing effect. (If I recall, it's nitric oxide in the "smoke ring" that works the magic.) The trick just seems to be: do such smoking in a closed space. Don't have smoke on the bottom side of your meat and "fresh air" (which isn't) wafting across the top like on an open grill. So smokers have doors. Use them. (Besides, if yer' lookin', y'aint' cookin'.)
7. The other important aspect of "cold smoking" is that even without electric fans, the natural draft of cold air being heated and rising results in a "positive pressure" within the smoker. So your doors don't have to be "air tight"...there's a pressure inside resisting that bacteria-laden air from entering.
8. And of course in this forum we're talking about pellet grills and smokers so we're NOT talking about cold smoking. But the point is if in Smoke mode you occasionally drop below 150F or even below 140F, well, people have been doing that for centuries, and in much less sanitary conditions than us. Still, it's good practice (and saves time) to get to know your cooker and avoid low temps. If you like to cook at 220F and you find in Smoke Mode you drop to 150F in 20 minutes, then set your smoke time to 20 minutes, not the 1 hour the manual might recommend. Most all controllers revert to your set point when the smoke mode time is up so they really are "set and forget".

Anyway, I hope this puts your mind at rest. Occasional swings under 200F are nothing to worry about in a closed, smoke-filled cooker. There may be things about this hobby (the quantity of fat consumed, general colorectal cancer risk, etc) that bears some long-term health risk, but getting botulism isn't one of them.
 
Its not fewer pellets its a longer pause between the pellet feed
Kinda the same thing as I see it. in the same amount of time, longer pauses = less pellets. 6 and half dozen. ;) Not arguing just clarifying that we are saying the same thing is differing ways.
 
Thanks for the warm welcome and thanks for the information this put my mind at ease.
 
Don't sweat it Nes227. Pretty soon you'll know that pit boss like the back of your hand and be helping a newbie yourself! Personally for ribs on my pit boss (1000SC) I use the P setting on 6 (more pellets more smoke slightly higher temp than the standard P4) for about an hour then go 225 until it hits finishing temp. There are hundreds of ways to do ribs on this site. Pick what works for you and go with it!
 
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Yeah I only really follow the smoke rule on poultry. I try to get it above 140 in 2-3hrs. Never got sick off the food I smoked. Keeping your grill clean, and working proper will do more to keep you healthy tan time spent in smoke mode.
 
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