I work 12 to 15 hour days, I mostly work graveyard getting off at 5-7am. So my smoking is about convenience, simplicity and results. I have the MES 40". Lets go through my smoke for today. Sunday I worked (a 6 day week), got off at 3 am monday, dropped by Win Co (open 24/7), nothing looked decent so grabbed some chicken thighs, some pizza mixings. I started playing poker online, and was stuck a few $$$ hundred so didn't go to bed. My wife asks me to smoke a fryer she had thawing in fridge. While playing poker and drowning my losses with cold beer, I get the chicken in brine, going for asian flavors.
The plan, smoke the thighs and fryer, make pizza for appetizer coarse, with hosin glazed thighs, garlic potatoes, stir fried mixed veggies, using the weber gas grill for the pizza, finish/glaze the thighs, potatoes, and stir fry.
At noon my daughter and I were hungry, so I grilled us a couple of hamburgers. DISCOVERY, both my LP bottles are either empty or almost empty (my son living at home likes to grill, and used up LP not mentioning needed refill). I can't stay awake any longer so off to get a nap and start Smoke at 4pm.
Wife wakes me at 6pm. She doesn't want to wait till 8:30-9 to eat. So change of plan, start the smoke on chicken thighs and fryer, make 2 pizzas instead of one and pizza is main coarse. One problem, no LP! Love my
weber kettle, still got 1/2 bag of briquets.
Now the fun starts:
1. Start MES pre-heat, soak some wood chips, boil water. 5 minutes.
2. Prep chicken, 15 minutes
3. Start charcoal briquets in starter 30 minutes
4. Put chicken in MES, add wood, set temp 170deg. 5 minutes
5. Prep pizza toppings, including sausage, onion, garlic, olives, tomatoes, bell pepper, mushrooms, pepperoni, 3 kinds of cheese, (cheated used bottled sauce). 15 -20 minutes.
6. 7pm started grilling pizza, my
MES chicken has been cooking for 30 minutes
unattended!!! My taylor remote probe died, so I can't monitor internal temp of chicken unless I open MES, but I know it will take around 2 hours so I will sample temp then.
(somewhere in here I added 2nd 1/2 cup of soaked wood).
7. 7:40 serve up 2 pizzas as dinner for 4, plus salad.
8: 8:30 after dinner, chicken had been smoking almost 2 hours. Temp check thighs at 170-175, and fryer at 165.
9. The briquets in the weber were still hot enough to glaze and finish thighs. I removed thigh skin, brushed on Hosin sauce, and glazed.
10. We each had a post dinner appetizer hosin glazed chicken thigh, YUM.
Why the big long story. My work schedule prevents me from being able to run around and gather up supplies during the day. 2 out of 3 smokes are based on whatever I happen to pickup at the store either the day prior to the smoke or day of (unless I'm cooking for special occassion). That means I don't get to prepare and plan and gather.
Electric is THERE (unless power outage), my LP wasn't.
I could have also been out of briquets, easily solved by running to store. LP refill place already closed and not a convenient drive.
Conclusion: Electric is most dependable fuel, unless power outage.
After I put chicken in MES set temp, I basically didn't have to worry about the smoke any more, except to remember to add wood.
Conclusion: I can't talk about other electric smokers only the MES. The MES is truly a "set it and forget it smoker". Heck I did all that tending stuff, when I used to smoke on my
weber kettle, yeah its easier on a decent charcoal or gas smoker, but not by much. I had planned to get a
WSM, considered one of the best backyard charcoal smokers made (even some big BBQ teams use em). 2 problems, on long smokes you have to keep adding fuel, and not enough capacity. See capacity below.
In the above story, I used about 1 cup of wood chips.
Conclusion: I have done about 10 smokes on my MES, I have a 5 lb bag of hickory wood chips. So far I have used only about 50% of the bag. Electric smokers don't consume much wood, so a small savings on cost.
I mentioned capacity above, the MES 40" capacity is awesome for a backyard smoker. 4 racks, I could cook 4 or 5 racks of ribs on one rack (whole racks, not cut or coiled), 2-4 whole chickens on 2nd rack, 3rd rack 2 small butts and a whole brisket (depending on size). I would still have a 4th rack for ABTs or something else. We have 2 or 3 big BBQs a year, so capacity is a factor for me.
Conclusion: GREAT capacity, did I mention cost of operation? 8 to 10 cents an hour. NO other type of smoker can compare, except wood, if you owned your own trees, but then you got the labor for harvesting and cutting to use.
Results, what does the Q taste like? The first party my new MES cooked for, almost 20 people, 10 racks of ribs both baby back and st.louis cut spares, the girls were asking for 2nd and 3rd helpings. Comments like, "professional quality", "man, you can really taste the smoke", "so tender", etc. When the day was over I was happy with my MES purchase!
Conclusion: If there is a difference in taste between a decent charcoal or gas smoker and the MES, most people are not going to know the difference. None of my friends hang out at BBQ joints or go to smoking competitions.
Clean-up is easy on the MES, just scrub the racks with meat stuff off in sink, and then put in dishwasher. Wipe out any drippings that have pooled. I foil water pan and drip tray so just simply stick in dishwasher.
Bottom line, I'm happy with my electric MES, it fits my lifestyle and cooking needs. The question, what fits your needs?
I wish you the best, enjoy the purchase process, and hopefully you will be enjoying great Q soon too!