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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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I've been having a hard time lately with my electric. I'v e been getting
dense smoke clouds along with a very bitter finish on whatever is in there. If I open the top vents to try and keep the smoke flowing and not condensing I get a roaring fire and huge temp spikes. This is even with the bottom vents closed. Can anyone with experience on this unit offer some tips? __________________________________________________ _______________ JG... Jeff Givens "My hovercraft is full of eels." |
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On Tue, 25 May 2004 20:27:19 GMT Bob in socal
wrote: Roaring fire with an electric ? Surely you're not piling wood on the electric element are you ? I have an ECB electric and wrap no more than 2 small pieces of smoking chunks in aluminum foil and place in between the electric elements for smoke. Bob in socal.. Bob, yes against the element to get them started and then I usually poke them around a bit to keep things smoldering. But even just sitting there when I pull the lid they will burst into flame within a minute, generally. Funny, but I have been playing with some mesquite chunks today trying to find good airflow settings for moderate smoke and no flame, and it hasn't really been a problem. I pull the lid off and they just sit there and smolder. Hickory is what I've used up until today. How much smoke do you shoot for in your ECB? Just faint wisps - enough to barely be seen, and I mean 'barely', or a slightly steadier smoke production? I did some chicken that, once the creosote outer covering was removed, was damn fine, but obviously less is the way to go. __________________________________________________ _______________ JG... Jeff Givens "My hovercraft is full of eels." |
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"Jeff Givens" wrote in message ... Funny, but I have been playing with some mesquite chunks today trying to find good airflow settings for moderate smoke and no flame, and it hasn't really been a problem. I pull the lid off and they just sit there and smolder. Hickory is what I've used up until today. The mesquite chunks aren't green are they? You should barely even notice any smoke if at all. -CAL |
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"Jeff Givens" wrote in message ... Funny, but I have been playing with some mesquite chunks today trying to find good airflow settings for moderate smoke and no flame, and it hasn't really been a problem. I pull the lid off and they just sit there and smolder. Hickory is what I've used up until today. The mesquite chunks aren't green are they? You should barely even notice any smoke if at all. -CAL |
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On Wed, 26 May 2004 01:22:56 GMT Bob in socal
wrote: As I said before, I wrap one or two fist sized chunks of hickory, cherry or pecan in aluminum foil and poke a couple small hole in the top. I position them in between the heating element coils, not touching the element. Some like mesquite, some, myself included, find mesquite to be a mite bitter. You shouldn't see that much smoke coming out of the thing and certainly won't see creasote on the food. Pecan or Cherry is my choice for chicken and I use Hickory for beef and pork butts. YMMV. See: alt.binaries.food for a photo named ECB_wood.jpg Thx for info. I started a shoulder this morning and am taking the gradual approach and wasn't getting anything from the two chunks I had in the pan (uncovered) until i got them against the coils for a couple a minutes then pulled them off. Am now getting very wispy smoke with top vents mostly open. Can't quite get to 220 tho - it's 59 out right now plus the load of meat (5 lbs.) and water is a huge heat sink. __________________________________________________ _______________ JG... Jeff Givens "My hovercraft is full of eels." |
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