- Jun 21, 2014
- 22
- 27
Wow thanks all. That is a lot of info to digest. I have made another smoke on Friday and maybe will do another tomorrow. Here's what I did, and the results:
1) As to wood chips on diffuser, unfortunately when I tried to put a pan on there the grease tray above it would not sit right. There's only an inch or so between the diffuser and grease tray. Sooo, I set the pan with wood chips / chunks on top of the grease tray. Did not get ignition so I will have to revisit this. I'm worried if I remove the grease tray I'll start a fire, and not the good kind.
2) I lit the AMAZN tube with Mesquite pellets, let it go for 15-20 minutes before I fired up the grill to confirm it was burning. It stayed burning for most of the smoke (5.5 hours or so) so I'm glad for that. I can only guess last time that it didn't stay lit, I didn't do a good job of lighting it!
3) I used the Big Kahuna. I had to reload it about every 30-40 minutes. I put a layer of chips on the bottom, then chunks, then chips. I believe this is so much smaller than the Magnum PIG that the two probably aren't the same. I did get TWS for the duration of my smoke, but oddly didn't pick up a lot of the smoke flavor (but a small hint did come through). I was very hopeful when I realized if I added another couple chunks, and some chips, every so often I could keep it going with smoke. Perhaps the fact the air is moving so fast makes a difference. Not sure.
As to the vents - I do have top vent closed and side vent open. I'm thinking about fixing up something to close the side vent and open the top just a little bit. I saw one of the Smoke Daddy videos and they had the side closed and the top open. This is something I'm thinking about anyway.
4) Temperature held steady though I did see some times it got up to 10-degrees hotter. Not sure if that was related to me adding fuel to the Big Kahuna, seemed to be tied to that so maybe it adds a few degrees for a bit.
Since I wanted to be apples to apples, I did the same cook times / temps / wrap schedule I normally would have done. I also was in the habit of cooking my ribs the day before eating so I did that this time too. I find the wrap method great but the rib meat falls off the bone when done, and I don't like that. By happenstance one day I had to cook some ribs for a large Kingdom Hall gathering and I did them the day before so we could just throw on the grill and warm up day-of at the park. Turns out they were so much better, still tender, same flavor and smokiness, but the bones didn't fall out (meat did come cleanly off bone just not accidentally). So, once I realized that letting the meat congeal in the fridge over night, then grilling for 30-minutes the next day makes, for me, the best ribs. SOOOO, long story short, I wanted to be apples to apples and followed the same routine for this cook. Cooked Friday, and ate ribs for breakfast this morning :) Gotta love that
Results? Very slight smoke aroma. Normally, the next day when I unpack the ribs the smoke aroma would be strong and very noticeable, you could tell they were smoked ribs. Today a very close sniff and I could "kinda sorta" tell but not what I was hoping for. It was better than the last batch. I thought for sure the TWS from the Big Kahuna would have made it taste bad but it didn't. So, I didn't get that taste I like.
I'm a bit nervous about removing the grease tray to put a pan of chips on the diffuser but a pan of chips / chunks burning always worked on my gas smoker. I just need a way to get the chips there and still be able to access the chip / chunks to add more if needed and under the grease tray that isn't happening. Anyone have thoughts on this? Is it a severe fire hazard to remove the grease tray? Maybe put a pan under the ribs? For now I'm only doing one rack testers so easy to do, but when I have a large gathering and a dozen racks, not so sure about that then.
What do I think I need to do? I'm contemplating how I can fit a Magnum PIG on there, or maybe make my own but I really don't have machine tools so not sure that's an option. I believe the PIG is so much bigger that it works better. I'd have to break lump charcoal into smaller pieces to fit into the Big Kahuna, the PIG looks to be much larger. I'm also contemplating starting my smoke at 180-degrees or something to see if I can get more smoke out of the pellets but I hate changing my temps and cook times because then I'm dealing with another set of problems. That's the whole reason I'm just doing ribs now, one thing I knew how to cook routinely and very well. Once I get these I'll venture into other meats, and maybe try that brisket I've been dying to do.
Anyway, long post, but I wanted to be thorough. I'll keep posting here until I get it just the way I want them. For now, here's a pic shortly after I replenished the Big Kahuna.
- Joe
1) As to wood chips on diffuser, unfortunately when I tried to put a pan on there the grease tray above it would not sit right. There's only an inch or so between the diffuser and grease tray. Sooo, I set the pan with wood chips / chunks on top of the grease tray. Did not get ignition so I will have to revisit this. I'm worried if I remove the grease tray I'll start a fire, and not the good kind.
2) I lit the AMAZN tube with Mesquite pellets, let it go for 15-20 minutes before I fired up the grill to confirm it was burning. It stayed burning for most of the smoke (5.5 hours or so) so I'm glad for that. I can only guess last time that it didn't stay lit, I didn't do a good job of lighting it!
3) I used the Big Kahuna. I had to reload it about every 30-40 minutes. I put a layer of chips on the bottom, then chunks, then chips. I believe this is so much smaller than the Magnum PIG that the two probably aren't the same. I did get TWS for the duration of my smoke, but oddly didn't pick up a lot of the smoke flavor (but a small hint did come through). I was very hopeful when I realized if I added another couple chunks, and some chips, every so often I could keep it going with smoke. Perhaps the fact the air is moving so fast makes a difference. Not sure.
As to the vents - I do have top vent closed and side vent open. I'm thinking about fixing up something to close the side vent and open the top just a little bit. I saw one of the Smoke Daddy videos and they had the side closed and the top open. This is something I'm thinking about anyway.
4) Temperature held steady though I did see some times it got up to 10-degrees hotter. Not sure if that was related to me adding fuel to the Big Kahuna, seemed to be tied to that so maybe it adds a few degrees for a bit.
Since I wanted to be apples to apples, I did the same cook times / temps / wrap schedule I normally would have done. I also was in the habit of cooking my ribs the day before eating so I did that this time too. I find the wrap method great but the rib meat falls off the bone when done, and I don't like that. By happenstance one day I had to cook some ribs for a large Kingdom Hall gathering and I did them the day before so we could just throw on the grill and warm up day-of at the park. Turns out they were so much better, still tender, same flavor and smokiness, but the bones didn't fall out (meat did come cleanly off bone just not accidentally). So, once I realized that letting the meat congeal in the fridge over night, then grilling for 30-minutes the next day makes, for me, the best ribs. SOOOO, long story short, I wanted to be apples to apples and followed the same routine for this cook. Cooked Friday, and ate ribs for breakfast this morning :) Gotta love that
Results? Very slight smoke aroma. Normally, the next day when I unpack the ribs the smoke aroma would be strong and very noticeable, you could tell they were smoked ribs. Today a very close sniff and I could "kinda sorta" tell but not what I was hoping for. It was better than the last batch. I thought for sure the TWS from the Big Kahuna would have made it taste bad but it didn't. So, I didn't get that taste I like.
I'm a bit nervous about removing the grease tray to put a pan of chips on the diffuser but a pan of chips / chunks burning always worked on my gas smoker. I just need a way to get the chips there and still be able to access the chip / chunks to add more if needed and under the grease tray that isn't happening. Anyone have thoughts on this? Is it a severe fire hazard to remove the grease tray? Maybe put a pan under the ribs? For now I'm only doing one rack testers so easy to do, but when I have a large gathering and a dozen racks, not so sure about that then.
What do I think I need to do? I'm contemplating how I can fit a Magnum PIG on there, or maybe make my own but I really don't have machine tools so not sure that's an option. I believe the PIG is so much bigger that it works better. I'd have to break lump charcoal into smaller pieces to fit into the Big Kahuna, the PIG looks to be much larger. I'm also contemplating starting my smoke at 180-degrees or something to see if I can get more smoke out of the pellets but I hate changing my temps and cook times because then I'm dealing with another set of problems. That's the whole reason I'm just doing ribs now, one thing I knew how to cook routinely and very well. Once I get these I'll venture into other meats, and maybe try that brisket I've been dying to do.
Anyway, long post, but I wanted to be thorough. I'll keep posting here until I get it just the way I want them. For now, here's a pic shortly after I replenished the Big Kahuna.
- Joe

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