Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Texas BBQ...
Just wanted to post my love for Texas BBQ. While I have not hit Lockart, TX, the capital of Texas BBQ, I will one day. So many BBQ places, so little time.


Tuesday, August 5, 2008
oh, hello
I seem to have run out of time to post. Been so busy cooking.
Last week I cooked for a buddy some pulled pork. It was for a friend of his. It was big hit. I fixed beans, pork, buns, and sauce.
Then another buddy wanted a brisket and beans, so he brought a massive 15-LB brisket... The thing was almoest too big for the Egg. I stuck that thing on the smoker at 10:00 am, and pulled it off at 10:00 the next day. It came out amazing. Juicy, smokey, and delicious...
Many other smokes as well. I have done about 25 lbs of pork total, and more to come.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Rocks in the lump
I finished my first bag of lump with the burgers cook. That 10 LB bag of lump lasted over 55 hours of slow and hot cooking, with only about an 1-1/2 inch of a five gallon pail full of ash. Amazing.
The biggest issue was the concrete I found in the lump. I sent a letter off to BGE and await a response.
The biggest issue was the concrete I found in the lump. I sent a letter off to BGE and await a response.
Burgers
Sunday, July 20, 2008
An Eggalicous weekend!
I had plans to do some cooking on the egg, and this weekend allowed me to use it for 3 days in a row.
Thursday I hit Costco for some baby Back rib. They come in a three pack. I had plans for at least one rack, so i decided that dinner Friday was going to be some ribs. I unwrapped and washed them, then rubbed them down with a thin coat of yellow mustard. Then I covered them in a heavy coat of a 50/50 secret rub and raw sugar. These then went on the egg for 5 hours with some soaked Apple wood, and were even better than last time. I made some corn on the cob from Whole Foods, and we ate like kings! The cool part was after I at, I cranked down the Egg to 190 degrees, and let it sit for about 5 hours. Saturday my close friend, Jack, would be having a birthday, so i told him, as my gift, I would make him a brisket. I kept the Egg low so I wouldn't have to relight. I added some Mesquite for smoke, and at 1:23 am, put my brisket on.
From an earlier post, you can see the Stoker log and how it dealt with the pit, keeping it around 220 +/- a degrees, unless I messed with the pit, then the fan has to adjust the temp.

When I knew I had about 5 hours left, I threw on a rack of ribs, as an added bonus to the brisket. The meat hit 185, so I pulled it and put in a cooler. The ribs were done, I made some beans then headed to my buddies house to deliver his meal. He was thrilled. I got lots of compliments, and learned alot about brisket.
Sunday was pizza day. The past week, I visited the Seattle Aquarium with my mom and the kids. It was a great day. While I was down there, we stopped in at Big Johns PFI For some Italian flour and tomato sauce. I made the dough by hand, prepped the sauce and cut some mushrooms, some ham, and some basil. It was a feast. Enjoy!
Monday, July 14, 2008
Pulled Pork!
I volunteered to bring some Pulled Pork to a gathering a buddy had for his mom. I said this, even though I had never done pulled pork. I had always done ribs. But I figured, no time like the present. So off to the WWW to find out about the "right" way to cook pork. The it was off to the cookbook cabinet to see what the champs had done. I found that 98% of Pulled Pork is just done with rub. The other 2% use injectors. I went with the rub only. I went to Safeway and found two bone-in Pork Shoulders, at 8 lbs each. So for my first cook, I went with 16 lbs of pulled pork. Usually I have my meat rubbed and left overnight, but I had issues the night before. I rubed and massaged the meat, and left it for 4 hours. For years, I have been using Willighams rubs, which has worked for me. It is also what I had.
I filled the egg to the fire-ring, and got the Stoker set up, and the egg lit. The experts think that about 1.5 - 2 hours per pound. So we were ready for the long haul.
The stoker worked like magic. 225 for 19 hours. I realized I had set up the fire wrong. Not wrong per say, but not a long haul fire. It about 1:00 and we were out on the deck enjoying some company and I hadn't seen smoke in some time. I had some help lifting the grate and moving my chunks of mesquite around. That fixed the problem. Or at least until the end when the grate gets a bit clogged up. That was an easy fix. So I went to bed and got some sleep just as the pork was hitting it's platou or 160 degrees. That when the fat and collagen start to break down and its becomes pull- able pork. I woke up and the temp was at 177 degrees. I wanted 195, but eventually, it hit 185 degrees.
Oh, what a site. The smell and the look. It was fantastic to see. I pulled them off the Egg, and rolled them in foil for an hour. I pulled them and they were juicy and tender, melt in your mouth. A few of my neighbors came over and had a chunk. They loved it. I made some sauce and took it over to my buddies house. They loved it. It was a big hit!
Of course I forgot to take a picture of what everything looked like after it was pulled. But it was beautiful. The coolest thing was that after one load, 19 hours, this is the fuel that was left. Amazing.
Friday, July 11, 2008
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