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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Default Brand New WSM on the deck!

Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
ago. I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!

Wooohooo!

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Denny Wheeler > wrote:
> Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
> ago. I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
> there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!
>
> Wooohooo!


Great news, Denny! I had heard that the move was in the offing. I hope that
you and Desi are very happy together. Ribs and chicken is a good start.
What kind of wine?

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On 30 May 2010 23:12:17 GMT, Nick Cramer >
wrote:

>Denny Wheeler > wrote:
>> Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
>> ago. I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
>> there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!
>>
>> Wooohooo!

>
>Great news, Denny! I had heard that the move was in the offing. I hope that
>you and Desi are very happy together. Ribs and chicken is a good start.
>What kind of wine?


The kind made from malt and hops.

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On Sun, 30 May 2010 16:13:04 -0700, Denny Wheeler
> wrote:

>On 30 May 2010 23:12:17 GMT, Nick Cramer >
>wrote:
>
>>Denny Wheeler > wrote:
>>> Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
>>> ago. I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
>>> there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!
>>>
>>> Wooohooo!

>>
>>Great news, Denny! I had heard that the move was in the offing. I hope that
>>you and Desi are very happy together. Ribs and chicken is a good start.
>>What kind of wine?

>
>The kind made from malt and hops.



Or, whatever we can dig out of boxes. ;-)


Desideria
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In article >,
Denny Wheeler > wrote:

> Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
> ago. I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
> there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!
>
> Wooohooo!


Well done. :-)
--
Peace! Om

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Only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar and fat. --Alex Levine


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On May 30, 5:33*pm, Denny Wheeler >
wrote:
> Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
> ago. *I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
> there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!
>
> Wooohooo!


Well played. I bought a WSM months after I moved in with my sweetie. I
wish I had been as quick as you.

Cam
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On Sun, 30 May 2010 18:47:55 -0700 (PDT), Cam >
wrote:

>On May 30, 5:33*pm, Denny Wheeler >
>wrote:
>> Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
>> ago. *I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
>> there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!
>>
>> Wooohooo!

>
>Well played. I bought a WSM months after I moved in with my sweetie. I
>wish I had been as quick as you.


Well, I had a MasterBuilt 7-in-1 gas/charcoal bullet. For Q, just
about had to run it on gas, but for grilling, only charcoal would give
useful temps. It wasn't bad--I turned out some fairly good food using
it. When I went to prep it for the move, I found that the convection
plate (doubles as charcoal pan) was just about rusted through. Looked
like the unit had a few more cooks in it, but no more. Gave it to
next door neighbor, having shown her what the problem was, and the
next day she made some PP on it, and reported to me that it was all
good.

So today's cook removed an illusion I had. I had thought I knew what
a good rib was. Nope. NOW I know.

The chicken was outstanding, the ribs better. And this was almost
completely naked meat--kosher salt on the skin side of the chicken
halves, S&P on the ribs.

I already know one mod I want to make on the WSM, though. Handles on
the middle section. Lifting that--including the pan of sand, not
water--off to add one more chimney worth of lump was not a lot of fun,
just using the upper lip as a gripping place.

I dislike the idea of drilling through the enamel, but I see no other
way to add handles. Making 'em won't be a problem--draw 'em up in
SolidWorks and then laser-cut them, have 'em formed on one of our many
press brakes and there I am. Hmmmm... high-temp RTV caulk around the
holes once the handles are on? Might be the way to go.


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On May 30, 10:14*pm, Denny Wheeler >
wrote:

> The chicken was outstanding, the ribs better. *And this was almost
> completely naked meat--kosher salt on the skin side of the chicken
> halves, S&P on the ribs.
>


Aren't they good that way? Man, was that a revelation the first time I
did that. Pork ribs + smoke. salt and pepper = pure goodness.



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On Sun, 30 May 2010 23:08:13 -0700 (PDT), tutall >
wrote:

>On May 30, 10:14*pm, Denny Wheeler >
>wrote:
>
>> The chicken was outstanding, the ribs better. *And this was almost
>> completely naked meat--kosher salt on the skin side of the chicken
>> halves, S&P on the ribs.
>>

>
>Aren't they good that way? Man, was that a revelation the first time I
>did that. Pork ribs + smoke. salt and pepper = pure goodness.


I still used Danny Gaulden's finishing glaze on 'em. I'll be making
up another batch of his rub for my next cook.

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On May 31, 12:14*am, Denny Wheeler >
wrote:

> I dislike the idea of drilling through the enamel, but I see no other
> way to add handles. *Making 'em won't be a problem--draw 'em up in
> SolidWorks and then laser-cut them, have 'em formed on one of our many
> press brakes and there I am. *Hmmmm... high-temp RTV caulk around the
> holes once the handles are on? *Might be the way to go.


NO NO NO!

You don't have to drill through the porcelain. It is NOT enamel, and
will easily chip just like the porcelain on an old tub or sink.

Regardless, go to Lowes and buy some zinc plated sheetmetal garage
door handles made for overhead doors. They will fit perfectly in the
predrilled holes for the grill grates with no mods or new holes
needed. Just put them on the outside, (don't over tighten the grate
screws) and you are finished.

If you are going to drill something, get your handy Dremel out with a
grit disc and score the dome about halfway up between the bottom and
the top. Scoring, then grinding away some of the porcelain will keep
you from breaking the finish. Then drill a hole where you scored, the
ground away the finish to accomodate a 2 1/2" to 3" round
thermometer. A good thermo will get you and the WSM on the same sheet
of music really fast.

I would also suggest this site for all kinds of good stuff for the
WSM:

http://www.virtualweberbullet.com

Look to the left side of the page for operating tips and mods. It's a
gold mine.

Robert


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On Mon, 31 May 2010 00:57:21 -0700 (PDT), "
> wrote:

>On May 31, 12:14*am, Denny Wheeler >
>wrote:
>
>> I dislike the idea of drilling through the enamel, but I see no other
>> way to add handles. *Making 'em won't be a problem--draw 'em up in
>> SolidWorks and then laser-cut them, have 'em formed on one of our many
>> press brakes and there I am. *Hmmmm... high-temp RTV caulk around the
>> holes once the handles are on? *Might be the way to go.

>
>NO NO NO!
>
>You don't have to drill through the porcelain. It is NOT enamel, and
>will easily chip just like the porcelain on an old tub or sink.
>
>Regardless, go to Lowes and buy some zinc plated sheetmetal garage
>door handles made for overhead doors. They will fit perfectly in the
>predrilled holes for the grill grates with no mods or new holes
>needed. Just put them on the outside, (don't over tighten the grate
>screws) and you are finished.


I'll look at the ones at Lowe's; still might make my own, given my
full access to a *good* sheetmetal shop. I was thinking about the
grate-support holes. FTM, I need to check the OM for the older one to
see if those holes are in the same places. This model has 4 pieces of
flat bar stock, bent suitably, that support the two grates and the
water (sand!) pan.

>If you are going to drill something, get your handy Dremel out with a
>grit disc and score the dome about halfway up between the bottom and
>the top. Scoring, then grinding away some of the porcelain will keep
>you from breaking the finish. Then drill a hole where you scored, the
>ground away the finish to accomodate a 2 1/2" to 3" round
>thermometer. A good thermo will get you and the WSM on the same sheet
>of music really fast.


This is the newer model of WSM--comes *with* a thermo already. I
haven't calibrated it yet, but based on my results yesterday I think
it's fairly close. Heck, I don't really care if it's accurate--so
long as it's consistent. I can make mental adjustments for
inaccuracies, if they're consistent.


>I would also suggest this site for all kinds of good stuff for the
>WSM:
>
> http://www.virtualweberbullet.com


Oh, yes. I have spent some time on VWB and will be there a lot more.
What with having just moved and not got remotely unpacked yet, I
haven't the time I want to take there.

>Look to the left side of the page for operating tips and mods. It's a
>gold mine.


Will be doing. I know some of the mods apply more to the older
edition--like on this one the door is way bigger than the earlier
ones.

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"Denny Wheeler" > wrote
> This is the newer model of WSM--comes *with* a thermo already. I
> haven't calibrated it yet, but based on my results yesterday I think
> it's fairly close. Heck, I don't really care if it's accurate--so
> long as it's consistent. I can make mental adjustments for
> inaccuracies, if they're consistent.


Exactly. I don't even look at the numbers, I just go by needle position.
Its bbq, not a moon shot.

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Default Brand New WSM on the deck!

congratulations on the move and the cooker, Lee
"Denny Wheeler" > wrote in message
...
> Sweetie (Desideria) and I moved into a house together a couple weeks
> ago. I got myself a WSM this week, assembled it this morning--and
> there's charcoal and wood in it now, about to be ribs and chicken too!
>
> Wooohooo!
>



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