Yesterday I smoked a couple of whole chickens for the first time on my newest smoker.
Salted an hour an a half prior, Sprayed with Pam, and used Memphis Dust Rub.
Smoked with about 25% Hickory, 75% Oak for about 2.5HRS at 280 Degrees or so. Cranked the heat up to about 320 for the last 15 minutes or so with the goal of crisping the skin. Pulled them off at 162 Degrees.
I've done many chickens on my WSM and they always come out nearly perfect at 225 Degrees except for the skin which is never crispy enough, but the meat itself always has had a perfect smoke flavor using lump coal and hickory chunks. So perfect meat, not perfect skin.
On this occasion, the skin came out much better, though still not crispy enough, and surprisingly the smoke flavor was okay, but unexpectedly, not as good as usual. I'm a little stumped as this has never happened before.
The meat came out very nice and tender. Overall a successful day, but I still have work to do as the goal is "Great BBQ", not "Good BBQ"!
Next time I think I'll try using only Hickory to see if that imparts a stronger smoke flavor. Maybe I'll break out the torch to try and crisp the skin to perfection?
Salted an hour an a half prior, Sprayed with Pam, and used Memphis Dust Rub.
Smoked with about 25% Hickory, 75% Oak for about 2.5HRS at 280 Degrees or so. Cranked the heat up to about 320 for the last 15 minutes or so with the goal of crisping the skin. Pulled them off at 162 Degrees.
I've done many chickens on my WSM and they always come out nearly perfect at 225 Degrees except for the skin which is never crispy enough, but the meat itself always has had a perfect smoke flavor using lump coal and hickory chunks. So perfect meat, not perfect skin.
On this occasion, the skin came out much better, though still not crispy enough, and surprisingly the smoke flavor was okay, but unexpectedly, not as good as usual. I'm a little stumped as this has never happened before.
The meat came out very nice and tender. Overall a successful day, but I still have work to do as the goal is "Great BBQ", not "Good BBQ"!
Next time I think I'll try using only Hickory to see if that imparts a stronger smoke flavor. Maybe I'll break out the torch to try and crisp the skin to perfection?

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