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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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no pecan wood for smoking but i do have lots of pecan hulls. good idea? idea
only a drunk would have? i should do it for a reference point for others? joe |
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On Jan 19, 6:50*pm, "Nunya Bidnits" > wrote:
> Seriously. I don't like mesquite for smoke, but do you save a little for > grilling steaks? (I mix it with hickory or cherry for wood fired steaks) > Tastes pretty good to me, and makes a nice hot fire for us charred rare > fans. I know Steve doesn't care for mesquite in any forms, but I like it for steaks, chicken, sausage, etc., anything that doesn't spend too much time on the pit. And even then, never all mesquite. It's too strong in my opinion for most meats to use alone. I use mesquite with brisket, say one small chunk mixed in with the oak. I have been to a couple of barbecue (Texas only, so no pork except baby backs for the spouses) cookoffs, and the pitmasters have their own mixes of oak, pecan, mesquite, cherry, etc., but I didn't see any of them using >all< mesquite. They cooked brisket, beef ribs, sausage and chicken. A little goes a long way with that stuff. I grew up with that flavor, so I miss on beef it when it isn't around. And sure enough, to my palate, it is dandy for steaks. 4 -5 minutes a side for a 1 1/2 to 2" ribeye or strip over mesquite coals is wonderful. Robert |