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| Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables. |
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Got 3 butts (22 lbs.) on the WSM for a friends party this weekend.
Everything's humming along fine. Temperature's steady at about 225º. Vents are fine-tuned. Open the access door from time to time to throw on another chuck of apple. I'm about to run to the grocery store and decide to check the cooker before I go. I look and there's the access door laying on the ground and it's like staring into a blast furnace. The temperature is off the scale. Long story short: things are back under control - seems to be no harm done. It's a good thing I decided to check when I did. Whew! -- TFM3 Note: Spam-resistant e-mail address |
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Got 3 butts (22 lbs.) on the WSM for a friends party this weekend. Everything's humming along fine. Temperature's steady at about 225º. Vents are fine-tuned. Open the access door from time to time to throw on another chuck of apple. I'm about to run to the grocery store and decide to check the cooker before I go. I look and there's the access door laying on the ground and it's like staring into a blast furnace. The temperature is off the scale. Long story short: things are back under control - seems to be no harm done. It's a good thing I decided to check when I did. Whew! -- TFM3 TFM3: I had this happen once, and after that I put a dab of paint on the acess doorknob to show where the latch is (it looks like a little stripe). Ever since then, no repeats of the WSM blast furnace. Darius |
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Thomas Mooney typed:
Got 3 butts (22 lbs.) on the WSM for a friends party this weekend. Everything's humming along fine. Temperature's steady at about 225º. Vents are fine-tuned. Open the access door from time to time to throw on another chuck of apple. I'm about to run to the grocery store and decide to check the cooker before I go. I look and there's the access door laying on the ground and it's like staring into a blast furnace. The temperature is off the scale. Long story short: things are back under control - seems to be no harm done. It's a good thing I decided to check when I did. Whew! OK, A couple of weeks ago, on alt.binaries.food, I teased you guys with an experiment and said that I'd post the results when I had time. I still don't have time to do a full report, but in a nutshell, here it is: I started 1 chunk of pork, about 8# cooking in my Kamado at about 350 with a couple of short lived spikes up to 375, until the internal temperature was about 195. Removed the butt from the grill, re-set my damper and door for low-and-slow, wrapped the shoulder in foil to rest. Put the second butt on the grill at about 325, with the temperature still descending. About an hour and a half later, it was about 225 and holding steady. I went in and "pulled" the first one (higher and faster) and was amazed at how juicy it was and how easily it pulled. It did have a nice smoke ring. Many hours later, the alarm went off and the internal temp was 195, so I wrapped the second one in foil to rest for about an hour. Both were rubbed with the same rub, freshly ground Penzey's Four Peppercorn Blend, a little salt, Freshly ground Jamaican Allspice, Cayenne pepper, onion powder, granulated garlic. I'd mixed a bunch in an old "Old Bay" jar, since I don't measure anything and I wanted to eliminate that variable. Both sat on the counter for about an hour and a half before going to the grill. When I pulled the second one, it pulled a lot easier, and was much more juicy. The first one was much better than any I've ever consumed in a commercial BBQ place, but, in *MY* opinion, and that of a couple of the "samplers" the second (low-and-slow) was more tender and juicy. To eleminate another variable, my new Redi-Chek was set for alarm 10 degrees above and below the target temperatures (350 and 225) and I never heard the alarms, so I guess the spikes or lows were not bad. Don't need no $250 automatic controllers! I think I'll stick to the low-and-slow, just because there's more beer and/or sleeping time, but I won't worry about high spikes when and if they happen. Of course, YMMV. BOB |
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