Smoking advice for offset smoker

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billg78

Newbie
Original poster
Mar 14, 2020
5
2
Hi all,
Long time griller, newbie smoker here. I'm hoping you guys might offer me a little advice in regards to using my offset smoker. Specifically, I'm having trouble maintaining a steady temp for my smoking. If I have a strong fire going in the smoker, the temp is too high. When I cut off the air flow, or I allow the fire to burn down to embers, the temp drops too low. If I add small chips/chunks, they seem to burn off too quick; if I add a log, I'm either back to too high of a temp when it ignites or the whole thing smolders out. I'm having a real hard time maintaining that 225-250 temp. If I use a burn barrel or external starter fire I find that I'm adding wood constantly, burning it down to small amounts of coals that burn out relatively quickly once I transfer them to the smoker. I'm sure this is a very common newbie problem, and I know all smokers/situations are different and I need more experimentation to get things on the right track, but any general advice would be much appreciated!!!
 
how are you controlling airflow, most guys leave the vent open and use the firebox door to adjust. use little adjustments and give it time to settle in 15-20 minutes. it's going to take time to learn your fire management but that's part of the fun. so grab some beers and smoke away!!
 
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First off forget about that 225 thing. I really don't know where that came from. Most offsets run hotter if you want to keep a good smoke going. At least mine does. It's happiest at 260 to 280. Everything cooks just fine at those temps. If you try to keep a steady temp in a stickburner like you can in an electric you'll go insane. Don't try to use just the vent to control it. Prop the firebox door open a little to get a new stick burning right. If the pit gets too hot prop it open a little to cool it down. Play with it.
You have to babysit an offset. It's part of the game and takes practice, but I like it.
It helps to have a few beers and some tasty tunes for babysitting :-)
 
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First off forget about that 225 thing. I really don't know where that came from. Most offsets run hotter if you want to keep a good smoke going. At least mine does. It's happiest at 260 to 280. Everything cooks just fine at those temps. If you try to keep a steady temp in a stickburner like you can in an electric you'll go insane. Don't try to use just the vent to control it. Prop the firebox door open a little to get a new stick burning right. If the pit gets too hot prop it open a little to cool it down. Play with it.
You have to babysit an offset. It's part of the game and takes practice, but I like it.
It helps to have a few beers and some tasty tunes for babysitting :-)
Pretty much dead on. Mine likes to run in the 245 range during good weather. Humidity, water content of wood etc all have some effect. Dont fight it. Take a Friday evening and a beverage with a carryout pizza and build a fire. Set there watching temps and make small adjustments. Eat a slice pizza and repeat . No stress of ruining a piece of meat, just fire mgmt.
 
First off forget about that 225 thing. I really don't know where that came from. Most offsets run hotter if you want to keep a good smoke going. At least mine does. It's happiest at 260 to 280. Everything cooks just fine at those temps. If you try to keep a steady temp in a stickburner like you can in an electric you'll go insane. Don't try to use just the vent to control it. Prop the firebox door open a little to get a new stick burning right. If the pit gets too hot prop it open a little to cool it down. Play with it.
You have to babysit an offset. It's part of the game and takes practice, but I like it.
It helps to have a few beers and some tasty tunes for babysitting :-)
Thanks for the advice! That's kind of what I'm learning about the babysitting part, but I'm a fan of wood/charcoal over gas/electric so I'm happy with the beers and tunes! Good to know about the temp, that's definitely a help as 225 just seems too low to make anything work.
 
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