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Royal Oak 100% Charcoal Pellets?!
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I've been mixing the blended charcoal pellets from a few brands in with my smoking pellets, I find it seems to help with temp recovery when doing a cook where you open the lid often to spritz or move things around. Grilling they seem to come to temp a bit quicker but nothing extrodinary.
I will try these if I can get them locally and depending on their price may use them more than once If I do a review I will do so straight and also mixed in a blend.
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That's it. I use Pit Boss but haven't seen the charcoal.
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they are an oak blend... of the charcoal blends I've tried I like the BBQers delight ones the most but they are expensive (not available locally) and then 2nd I liked the char hickory that Lumberjack has. The PB ones honestly didn't do anything different with temps or recovery time like the other 2.
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Club Member
- Jun 2016
- 2470
- Beautiful Downtown Berwyn, IL
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Grill: SNS Charcoal Kettle/ Grilla Original / Weber Genesis EP-330 / OK Joe Bronco Drum
Thermometers: Thermapen / iGrill 2 / Fireboard
For Smoke: Chunks / Pellet Tube / Mo Pouch
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Reddit: LeCheffre
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Club Member
- Jun 2016
- 2470
- Beautiful Downtown Berwyn, IL
-
Grill: SNS Charcoal Kettle/ Grilla Original / Weber Genesis EP-330 / OK Joe Bronco Drum
Thermometers: Thermapen / iGrill 2 / Fireboard
For Smoke: Chunks / Pellet Tube / Mo Pouch
Sous Vide: Joule / Nomiku WiFi (RIP Nomiku)
Reddit: LeCheffre
Watched the live stream.
Biggest selling point for them:
They are water resistant. You can submerge them in water and they come out unchanged.
Other selling points:
They are 100% charcoal in pellet form.
They reach a higher heat for searing if you have a direct burn option, like on a Traeger or the SmokeFire.
They give that charcoal flavor.
They will work low and slow.
They produce a low to average amount of ash.
Unanswered questions:
Not tested in a smoke tube.
Can you mix with traditional wood pellets? (one assumes so, but who knows)
Is the hardness a potential problem for your augur... jams and whatnot.
I'm interested. I've been doing thick, pub style burgers on the Grilla and that charcoal flavor might be a nice add. Also, they might require a lower rate of pellet feed at the typical smoke temps. But isn't the selling point of the pellet pooper that you're burning "real wood" and getting efficient combustion?
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They did a fairly convincing demonstration.
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ItsAllGoneToTheDogs , I'm guessing "water resistant" in this case means they won't be ruined like wood pellets would be if they get wet. A regular piece of charcoal (lump or briquette) is still usable once it dries out.Last edited by Steve R.; June 10, 2021, 02:19 PM.
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Steve R. that makes more sense especially since they don't expand. My brain was thinking more along the lines of some coating but just the inherent nature of charcoal being good after it dries out makes more sense
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Club Member
- Mar 2020
- 4756
- Near Chicago, IL
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