bbq
Throwing this out there in case someone has advice …..
I got a smoker this summer and have been having a great time cooking new (large) meals. But my kids are back at college and I can’t depend on my ex. How do you find people to eat your meals?
It’s a weird situation where it’s a huge pellet grill and smoking tends to focus on large pieces of meat, but not everything freezes well. I want to go gangbusters with feasts, just when I no longer have anyone to appreciate it. Anyone know if there is such a thing as cooking clubs, or something? How do you find one or how do you break into one as a single guy?
Fwiw
- kids are back from college today, ex is coming over and ex-FiL
- smoked duck with orange maple glaze
- chicken for those not willing to try duck
- rice pilaf
- arugula salad with toasted pine nuts
- I plan to throw chocolate chip cookie dough in a cast iron skillet for brownies and top with ice cream
- 2-1/2 lb. pork belly, rough 1-1/2" cubed
- dry rub of choice
- 3 hrs. at 225° directly on the grill
- braised in foil 1 hr. at 250° with a mix of honey, marmalade, BBQ sauce, agave nectar, bit of teriyaki, and salted butter
- removed cover and run for about 1 hr. same temp
- let cool and serve
I hate the prep work for these but it always ends up being worth it.
My first attempt at some beef short ribs. They came out better than I could have hoped and I was pleasantly surprised that I managed to keep my temps sane for 9 hours.
Baby back ribs for New Years. You can see more pictures and the temperature graph (of the smoker, not the ribs, usually don't stab ribs) on the fireboard session log.
I salted the ribs the night before the smoke and rubbed them with my variation of Memphis Dust (below) right before hanging them in my 14" Napoleon.
Quartered recipe from AmazingRibs.com with adjustments for more kick.
- 3 Tbsp packed dark brown sugar
- 2 Tbsp white sugar
- 2 Tbsp cayenne powder
- 1 Tbsp paprika
- 1 Tbsp garlic powder
- 1.5 Tsp ground black pepper
- 1.5 Tsp ground ginger
- 1.5 Tsp onion powder
- 1 Tsp rosemary powder (smash 2 Tsp)
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/9963599
> Decided to smoke a goose for Christmas. It was a big hit. We also got about 4 cups of smoked goose fat out of it. > > I used a 2:1 kosher salt and maple sugar mix for dry brining the bird and left it in the fridge uncovered over night. The method I used to smoke it is here: > https://blog.thermoworks.com/chicken/smoked-christmas-goose/
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1483598
> cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1468737 > > > Also grilled some napa cabbage and made a salad with that.
Based off a Meat Church recipe with some tweaks.
Trimmed, pulled membrane and dry brined with kosher salt the day before.
Took ribs out of refrigerator about an hour before I wanted to put them on to get the rub(s) on them and get them closer to room temp.
Starting on underside of ribs, gave a light spray with duck fat as a binder. Applied a pretty good coating of Meat Church Honey Hog Hot. Let ribs sit about 20 minutes to let rub become wet looking.
Flipped ribs over, hit with duck fat spray as a binder again. Applied a very light coat of Honey Hog Hot, then came in with a heavier coat of Meat Church Texas Sugar rub. Finished the top side of the ribs with some more 16 mesh black pepper (Texas Sugar has pepper but I like pepper).
Camp Chef Woodwind Pro had been turned when rubs came out of refrigerator. Using Knotty Wood Almond pellets. Started at 250 F with smoke setting on 10.
After rub on top side of ribs looking wet (about 20 minutes again) put ribs into smoker. Added 50/50 mix of pecan and cherry wood into Woodwind Pros smoke box. Feed chucks at same ratio into smoke box for first 3 hours, check smoke box every 30 minutes of so to add wood chunks.
After 2 hours, checked tops of ribs to see if rub was set and rotated the 3 racks of ribs, swapping positions and rotating front to back. Since rub was set I started spritzing with 50/50 water/apple cider vinegar (ACV).
At 3 hour mark rubs we’re cooking faster than I wanted to hit my mark for serving, so I turned down the heat to 225F. Was getting more bone pull back than I expected for 3 hours.
At hour 4, pulled the ribs to wrap them. Turned smoker up to 275F. Wrapped each rack in 2 sheets of heavy duty aluminum foil with a light spritz of ACV and a small amount of Blues Hog Tennessee Red BBQ sauce (vinegar based sauce). Turned ribs meat side down on sauce and wrapped up. Repeated for all 3 racks. Back into the smoker, turned down smokers smoke setting since I didn’t want to add more smoke and temps are more accurate with a lower smoke setting.
Checked at about 30 minutes and temped with the Thermapen. One rack looked good, good destruction on underside bones and was temping about 207F. Other 2 racks needed more time. After about 10 minutes more, destruction looked good but they were temping a bit low at 203F. I pulled them anyway.
Took all 3 racks from foil and put back in smoker meat side up. Basted ribs with Meat Mitch Naked Whomp! Sauce I had warming up in the smoker. Normally I would add, as per Meat Church, some Rib Candy Apple Cherry Habanero sauce to BBQ sauce. As Matt Pittman says, makes to ribs look “sexy like a show cat.” However, we had a guest to day who doesn’t do hot well and I was worried the ribs alone might be too spicy for her (they weren’t) Turned smoker down to 225F and let sauce tack up on ribs for about 10 minutes.
After sauce tacked up, piled and rested 15 minutes before slicing. Picture shows 2 racks sliced, last rack was in reserve if needed (it wasn’t).
Did a Korean bbq gochujang rub on one, something more traditional on the other!
My go to barbecue when having some company over. Always a hit!
For Dinner: Smoked brats from the local butcher, and some Costco party wings.
Garlic aroma from these brats punched me in the face when opening the fridge. Wings have been dry brining in some basic Kinder BBQ rub for a few hours.
Started brats at 225F while climbing. After about 30 minutes I’ll go wide open on vents. Once at 275F, adding the wings and going wide open. Pulling brats at 155F.
Throwing a half sweet onion and a whole poblano on the BBQ to top the brats with.
I’m hungry!
First time making bacon! Tasted good before smoking, BLT sandwiches are on the menu for lunch today!
4 hours at around 200F until internal hit 150F
Followed method from Chuds BBQ here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z19z5TNXf1o
I may have ate too much, but I am so happy with the results. Not bad for my first time and battling with rain messing with my temp.
Never smoked beef short ribs before. I'm looking forward to them. Here's to hoping I don't screw it up!
Ive been wanting to smoke short ribs for a while now. It's supposed to rain today, but that's not gonna stop me!
Tomorrow is going to be fun.
My wife and brother decided to celebrate their birthdays on the same Saturday.
No problem except that they do it in my backyard ...
So tomorrow I'm hosting 35, split on 2 bbq's. I'm doing onmivores, vegan, celiac diseasean vegan+celiac disease (that last one is a real kicker). In all a challenge, but fear not, my crematorium and his mates are up to this job!
Expect photos tomorrow.
- imgur.com 2023-07-08 BBQ Results
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I have a 26.5 Weber, and I love the extra space to grill, however, I would love to add a collar to attach a rotisserie, and I am having a hard time finding any in stock. There seem to be only one or two online sites, and they are sold out.
Plus, it's starting to seem like it'd be cheaper to simply by a Weber 22 for rotisserie purposes. Collars for them seem to be plentiful and cheap.
Any help or advice would be appreciated.
I have a new PK300 and an Akorn. I have previously owned a Weber 22”, a Masterbuilt 560, and a Pit Barrel Cooker.
Gmg with cherry wood pellets. 3 hours at 225 moving to 400 to give it a bit of char before resting
I've got 4 10-ish lb pork butts in the smoker for a party on the 4th and I'm about to fire up the grill for some ribeyes; we have two briskets in the fridge I'm gonna start on Tuesday morning, so I'm getting my mileage outta Weber this week!
I’ve been using a vertical smoker for years. I always like to put a layer of foil down at the lowest layer to catch some drippings from my butts.
Now that I got this pellet smoker (pit boss) I don’t see an easy way to do that. Should I just say fuck it and go no foil? Should put foil down at the bottom near the heater?
This is my Steak Tomahawk I smoked last weekend. Can’t wait to make some Ribs today!
- imgur.com A night of too many ribs
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I gotta stay in practice waiting for football season to start.
cross-posted from: https://midwest.social/post/838499
> Simple brown sugar brine for about 4 hours (forgot to start it before bed), then coated with melted butter with Penzey's Mural of Flavor and Galena Street. > > 225° for 45 minutes with Sam's club "Competition Blend" pellets in the box. Then 350-ish (max I could get out of it) for about an hour and a half with no smoke until breast was at 160° > > Used the drippings for gravy for mashed potatoes.