
itschris
Moderator
I can't give as much back on the audio/ht stuff, so I do what I can! This has been great thread.
One quick thing with smoking or any non-gas grilling... try using hardwood lump charcoal as opposed to briquets like Kingsford and others. Creosote is a by product of the brickets which has a tendancy to impart that bitterness you sometimes get in your food that Minus was talking about.
A simple way to avoid this is using the natural lump hardwood charcoal. It burns a lot harder and has a lot less ash then say kingsford and you don't have the creosote problem. I do use briquets, but I'm very careful how I set my fire. I usually subscribe to the minion method which is pouring already well burned coals from the chimeny starter atop the fresh ones in the firebox. The theory is that the creosote is largely burned off by the fired coals. That's the theory anyway. I just find that lump is much better for my purposes. Give it a try if you haven't already. One of my BBQ buddies told me about it and I never looked back.
The one great thing about my smoker is that it's made of 1/4 inche steel like the big comp rigs, so it really retains the heat well. The downside, is like any other offset, you have a hot side by the firebox and well defines angled temp line from the bottom to the opposite end top where the smoke stack is. Temps can literally vary 20 degrees from the grate level to just 4 inches above. It was really hard to figure it out at first because there's no neat "captain wiz-bang" features to help you. It just a big metal tube with smaller metal tube churning out heat. My temps used to be all over the place. Now, I know just how much lump to start with, how long that will last, how to set the smoke stack and adjust along the way. It took quite some time to get things going the way I wanted. I ruined quite a bit of stuff until I got it right. There was one point where I made a chuck roast that was so bad, my neighbors dog just wimpered at it and turned away!
We've been talking about having a competition over at our country club. There's a couple of other guys who fancy themselves as real BBQ'rs so I think that'd be fun. They take it quite serious, so it'll be interesting to see how my stuff compares.
One quick thing with smoking or any non-gas grilling... try using hardwood lump charcoal as opposed to briquets like Kingsford and others. Creosote is a by product of the brickets which has a tendancy to impart that bitterness you sometimes get in your food that Minus was talking about.
A simple way to avoid this is using the natural lump hardwood charcoal. It burns a lot harder and has a lot less ash then say kingsford and you don't have the creosote problem. I do use briquets, but I'm very careful how I set my fire. I usually subscribe to the minion method which is pouring already well burned coals from the chimeny starter atop the fresh ones in the firebox. The theory is that the creosote is largely burned off by the fired coals. That's the theory anyway. I just find that lump is much better for my purposes. Give it a try if you haven't already. One of my BBQ buddies told me about it and I never looked back.
The one great thing about my smoker is that it's made of 1/4 inche steel like the big comp rigs, so it really retains the heat well. The downside, is like any other offset, you have a hot side by the firebox and well defines angled temp line from the bottom to the opposite end top where the smoke stack is. Temps can literally vary 20 degrees from the grate level to just 4 inches above. It was really hard to figure it out at first because there's no neat "captain wiz-bang" features to help you. It just a big metal tube with smaller metal tube churning out heat. My temps used to be all over the place. Now, I know just how much lump to start with, how long that will last, how to set the smoke stack and adjust along the way. It took quite some time to get things going the way I wanted. I ruined quite a bit of stuff until I got it right. There was one point where I made a chuck roast that was so bad, my neighbors dog just wimpered at it and turned away!
We've been talking about having a competition over at our country club. There's a couple of other guys who fancy themselves as real BBQ'rs so I think that'd be fun. They take it quite serious, so it'll be interesting to see how my stuff compares.