I'm currently doing my first test run with my SnS in the Weber kettle, and about half way through the first load of charcoal (KBB), it started losing heat. When I opened up the lid, I could see that the coals were lit fairly evenly across the the SnS and that ash was building up and preventing oxygen from reaching the coals. I stirred them around to let the ash fall through and that seems to have worked. Is there anything I can do to keep this from happening? I wonder if it's being caused by the fact that some (less than half) of the unlit coals I added are being reused from a previous burn.
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In my experience KBB produces significantly more ash than Weber briquettes. The Weber briquettes also burn longer. They’re always my choice for long cooks in my SNS. My KBB I typically use just for hot & fast stuff.
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Where do you get th Weber briquettes? Hard to beat the massive holiday sales on KBB. Is it that much better?
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adamjs83 For about a year Lowe’s carried them for $12/bag but the ones around here don’t anymore. List price is $20/bag which is a little pricey. I found them at Ace Hardware here for $15/bag. To me it is a significant difference for long smokes in my SNS so I do keep Weber around just for that. They burn a lot longer too, ~33% longer in my unscientific tests.
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The reused coals could be the culprit as they tend to pack together tighter and not get as good of airflow. With fresh KBB i've gotten around 9 hours before I needed to knock the ash out and add more briquets. I've also needed to clear ash & refuel around 6 hours on a cold night. I generally save used coals for fuel for doing hot & fast cooks or direct grilling.
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Club Member
- Apr 2016
- 19257
- Near Richmond VA
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Weber Performer Deluxe
SNS
Pizza insert
Rotisserie
Cookshack Smokette Elite
2 Thermapens
Chefalarm
Dot
lots of probes.
Fireboard
If you are using a fan to help control temps, make sure you turn it off before clearing the ash. Otherwise the fan will blow ash on whatever you are cooking.
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Club Member
- May 2016
- 5664
- Huntington Beach, Ca. Surf City USA.
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Equipment
Primo Oval xl
Slow n Sear (two)
Drip n Griddle
22" Weber Kettle
26" Weber Kettle one touch
Blackstone 36†Pro Series
Sous vide machine
Kitchen Aid
Meat grinder
sausage stuffer
5 Crock Pots
Akootrimonts
Two chimneys (was 3 but rivets finally popped, down to 1)
cast iron pans,
Dutch ovens
Signals 4 probe, thermapens, chef alarms, Dots, thermapop and maverick T-732, RTC-600, pro needle and various pocket instareads.
The help and preferences
1 extra fridge and a deep chest freezer in the garage
KBB
FOGO
A 9 year old princess foster child
Patience and old patio furniture
"Baby Girl" The cat
Erik S.
I only ever EVER use KBB. On long cooks 1 ash sweep keeps me rolling, no biggie.
I never use unfinished coals. I only use new ones. One of the benefits of using KBB is the consistency of the product/cook. It does not make sense to me to use a compromised product.
I burn mine through every time. I generally count my coals and have just enough through the end of the cook.
after listening to FishTalesNC I may need to give Weber a shot.
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HouseHomey I typically don’t have to think about ash removal until ~7 hours into a cook, roughly halfway thru. I think I’ve had to refuel the SNS XL once when using Weber briquettes. They do take a little more energy to get started it seems.
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Club Member
- Apr 2018
- 90
- Central Oregon
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REC TEC RT-700 Bull
Weber Summit Charcoal Grill Center
ABC Slow N Sear Low Profile
ABC Drip N Griddle Pan
Weber Q1200
Weber Genesis II E335 Gas Grill
Maverick ET-732
Etekcity Infrared Thermometer
ThermoWorks Thermapen Mk4
ThermoWorks Thermapen ONE
GrillGrates for REC TEC
GrillGrates for Weber Summit Charcoal Grill Center
A-Maze-N 12" Tube Smoker for REC TEC
After each use, I stir the used coals so that the ash falls into the bottom of the kettle. That way, you are good to go for the next cook when you add fresh hot coals.
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Thanks everyone! I'm going to try again this weekend with all fresh briquettes. My hope is to be able to use this for an overnight cook, and tend it only once or twice.
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That should easily be doable if you use all fresh briquettes. I've done overnight smokes with my SNS, just need to set my alarm to get up within 7-8 hours of last reloading the charcoal. I've started turning off my Smoke's alarm overnight, so that I don't get waked up for what I now know are trivial high/low alarms.
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Awsome! I'm going to do another dry run during the day on Saturday, then hopefully cook a pork butt starting Sunday evening. I'll probably set my alarms fairly wide just to alert me to any potential problems. I think I'll shoot for 250* and set alarms at 275* and 225*.
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