My first cook was a pork shoulder. Knew nothing about smoking or grilling. I happen to be on line and saw a smoker and ordered it. Well after watching yt ( of course on mentioned stall). Well I guess you know what happen. The cook figured would be 6 or 8 hrs took 15. Live and learn.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
What was your biggest BBQ "light bulb" moment?
Collapse
X
-
First this thread is fantastic. Bravo Huskee for getting it going...have really been enjoying reading this.
I've had many light-bulb moments, many inspired by content here (eg science of salt as other have mentioned). But I think single biggest was when my father-in-law bought me my first (electric) smoker as a birthday present - I was an enthusiastic gas griller but had never thought of owning a smoker before! He had never smoked himself, so I was on my own to learn how...that led me to AR and opened up a whole new world. Learning to smoke larger cuts completely changed the way I think about cooking.
- Likes 4
Comment
-
Founding Member
- Jul 2014
- 5715
- Maple Valley, WA
-
Grill/Smoke/Roast = SnS Grills Kettle + SnS Deluxe Insert & Drip n' Griddle
Grill/Smoke/Roast = Hasty-Bake Gourmet Dual Finish with HB rotisserie and Grill Grates
Smoke = Weber Smokey Mountain 22.5"
Pizza = Blackstone Propane Pizza Oven (Stacy's, but she let's me use it sometimes)
Indoor Cooking = LG Studio 30" gas range
Camp Cooking = Coleman 2 burner white gas stove
Thermometer = FireBoard FBX2 with 2 ambient and 6 meat probes
Thermapen Mk IV = Light blue
Thermapen Mk IV = Black
PID Controller = Fireboard Drive + Auber 20 CFM Fan (FB gen 1 fan)
PID Controller = Fireboard Drive + Fireboard 20 CFM Fan (FB gen 2 fan)
Knives
Wusthof Classic Ikon set: 9" carving knive, 2X 8" Chef's Knife, 7" Santoku and three utility knives
Kamikoto Kuro set: 7" Santoku, 6.5" Nakiri, 5" Utility
Amazing Ribs Brazilian Steak knife set
Favorite wine = whatever is currently in the wine rack
Favorite beer = Sam Adams Boston Lager or Shiner Bock
Favorite whisky = Lagavulin Distiller's Edition 16 year old single malt
Best Cookbooks - Meathead's "The Science of Great Barbecue and Grilling", Chris Lilly's "Big Bob Gibson's BBQ Book", Aaron Franklin's "Franklin BBQ"
Cookbooks to check out - Raichlen's "Brisket Chronicles" and anything by Adam Perry Lang.
Current fanboy cookbook - "Chasing Smoke: Cooking Over Fire Around the Levant"
Some Posts in Pitmaster to check out:
Eric's Brisket Method
Eric's Method for Drunken Texas Beans
Stacy's Bouef Bourguignon
Eric's Smoked Texas Chili
Rancho Gordo Beans and Bean Club
Troutman's Ribs - Step By Step Primer
Grilled Pork Chops: Harissa Marinade
Light My (Hasty Bake) Fire
Eric
My single biggest lightbulb moment for BBQ/Grilling is that it is a managed process just like indoor cooking. And if you want to turn out good food outside, you have to manage the process. How you prep food, the fire, the smoke, time, temp, all of it. You have to manage the process and you have to do it with consistency.Last edited by ecowper; September 1, 2022, 09:48 AM.
- Likes 10
Comment
-
Club Member
- Jul 2019
- 395
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
-
Grills
Weber Smokey Mountain 22.5"
Weber Performer 22.5"
Weber Jumbo Joe 18"
Char-Griller Gravity 980
Thermometers
Thermoworks Signals
Thermoworks Billows
Thermoworks Thermapen MK4
Weber Connect
Accessories
Arbor Fabricating WSM Charcoal Basket W/ Minion Starter
LavaLock 22.5" Flattop Griddle
That real charcoal flavor was not what I remember from growing up. When I was a kid, we always attended church picnics, where the "old guys" (probably my age now) would use a generous amount of lighter fluid to get things going. Those fires never burned clean and there was always an aftertaste. Now in my own backyard, I've rediscovered charcoal and the wonderful flavors of wood smoke. It's a night and day difference.
- Likes 4
Comment
-
For food, it was cooking to temp. It changed everything from meat to bread for me.
For cookers, it was to stop chasing temps. I quit obsessing over temp swings, and running 5 degrees over or under what I thought the temp should be. Once I learned to let the cooker settle in to where it wants to run somewhere close to what I have in mind, and adjust timing from there, life got a whole lot easier.
Resting meat dovetails into there as well. Now that I know I can hold a large chunk of meat for hours, and not only doesn't it hurt anything, but actually helps, I don't have to sweat a stall that runs an hour longer than planned for. The meat is scheduled to be done hours before serving anyway, so a longer cook time is a non-issue. All of that was before I went the pooper route, and then jumped up to a premium pooper, It just doesn't get any easier than that.
- Likes 3
Comment
-
Club Member
- Apr 2018
- 5852
- Western Mass
-
Retired, living in Western Mass. Enjoy music, cooking and my family.
Current cookers Weber Spirit 3 burner with a full insert griddle added. A 22" Kettle with vortex SnS and OnlyFire pizza oven. A Smokey Joe and the most recent addition a Pit Barrel Jr with bird hanger, 4 hooks and cover. ThermoWorks Smoke 2 probe, DOT, ThermoPops and a Thermapen MK4. 3 TempSpike wireless meat thermometers.
I'll repeat. After reading the book, not soaking chips, using chunks, indirect cooking, digital thermometer, and the difference in the types of charcoal fuels. Finally, the science of it all.
Comment
-
Club Member
- Nov 2017
- 8005
- Huntsville, Alabama
-
Jim Morris
Cookers- Slow 'N Sear Deluxe Kamado (2021)
- Camp Chef FTG900 Flat Top Grill (2020)
- Weber Genesis II E-410 w/ GrillGrates (2019)
- Weber Performer Deluxe 22.5" w/ GrillGrates & Slow 'N Sear & Drip N Griddle & Vortex & Party Q & Rotisserie (2007)
- Thermoworks Smoke w/ Wifi Gateway
- Thermoworks Dot
- Thermoworks Thermapen ONE & Classic
- Thermoworks RT600C
- Weber Connect
- Whatever I brewed and have on tap! See it here: https://taplist.io/taplist-57685
For me, I would say getting a good instant/quick read thermometer from Thermoworks around 2011 made a huge change in my outdoor cooking game. And I initially bought the thermometer for beer brewing, but it upped my BBQ and grilling games tremendously over the old analog dial probe thermometer that I was using before that. With a decent digital thermometer, I now KNEW when my butts were 195F or whatever temp I was pulling them at back then, and knew when the chicken reached 160F and was done. No more dried out chicken or pork loins!
Of course, in 2011, they may have still been saying to take pork to 165. I'm not sure. There is a meat doneness temp chart printed on the control knob side table of my old 2002 Genesis Silver A, and it for sure says 165F for "done" on beef and pork, and maybe 185F for poultry!
But yes - a quality instant read thermometer was the turning point for me. Love my Thermapen!
- Likes 3
Comment
-
Club Member
- Dec 2018
- 2143
- Cincinnati Ohio
-
Gear includes: Char-Griller's Grand Champ off set stick burner/smoker, SnS Kamado Deluxe, Weber 22, PBC, Victory gasser, Victory 36 griddle, Smoke Hollow electric smoker. ThermoWorks Thermapen Mk4, Smoke, Signals, and RFX4, Meater+, SNS-500, roti fits 22 n gasser, Emeril countertop TO, InkBird Sous Vide, Potane Vac/Sealer. Fire&Ice griddle/cooler ensemble.
Just got into charcoal Dec ‘21 (PBC)
fav is brisky. Love Turkey on PBC. also Turkey in the glass,(any nice bourbon)
Bud has always been my barley pop.
Been smoking a handful of years, just got serious in the last two or three years. Thanks to AR n @glemn picked up an SnS Kamado for appx 1/3 price of new. I dont think he used it twice. Love AR! keep calm n smoke on! Miss you Bonesy.
Always used a gasser. Thought I was way ahead of the game, setting it up to plug into the house. Bought my first smoker, cpl three yrs ago. (Electric) 40 hrs for my first briskie. Knew nothing of the stall, the crutch or using a beer cooler for hot meat. Loved everything about the process. Joined AR n this crew has blown my mind. I stopped twitter, FB and instantelegram.
I don’t tik a lock. But I couldn’t wait to post my sunrise/sunsets! Got my comeuppance there!
Now there is nothing more rewarding that reading posts and looking at others meat on these hallowed pages. Ty AR n everyone that makes this site happen. Locked in and broke the knob off.
- Likes 3
Comment
-
Thermapen a big change recently and the salt thing.
Before internal temp (Thermapen) use to check if done by twisting the bone -- if loose can feel like can pull it out -- it was done -- a good done indication that worked for many many years. Must say think I was a good cook and the Thermapen made me a great cook.
But back in the day (early 70s) think I was about 15 yrs old. My dad only BBQed on holidays (about 4 Xs a year) and it was always chicken (all parts of the chicken including the back). Well on one 4th of 7 BBQ he asked me if wanted to turn the chicken so gave it a try. It as hot and smokey and the tongs were 2 forks tied together with rubber bands. He kept fussing me I'm taking too long letting all the heat out. Finally got em all turned and told me to take a break and cool off. Then gave me my first beer ever a Schlitz from a galvanize bucket with beer / ice and with newspaper over it. I was hooked on BBQ ever since.
Schlitz beer ----> spell check couldn't help with spelling had to Google it.Last edited by wag; September 3, 2022, 06:45 AM.
- Likes 3
Comment
-
Moderator
- May 2020
- 3946
- Long Beach, CA
-
22” Blue Weber Kettle with SnS insert
Kamado Joe Jr with Kick Ash Basket
Char-Broil Smartchef Tru Infrared Gasser
Anovo Hot Tub Time Machine with Custom Hot Tub
SVQ
Stall
flavors imparted by different woods
not soaking wood chunks
i know I have said it 1000 times… I was in a dark place for a while. Both AR and Mr. Bones brought me around. I have learned so much here. I went from one cooker to 3 that are in regular rotation. I have yet to post about my resurrected gasser (stay tuned).
most importantly, the inspiration I get from y’all! Thank you!
but I digress!
- Likes 6
Comment
-
Club Member
- Jul 2016
- 3604
- Elizabethtown, KY
-
Current line-up of cookers: Oklahoma Joe's Bronco Pro, Masterbuilt Gravity Series 1050, Blackstone ProSeries 4 Burner 36" griddle, Weber Performer Deluxe and Weber Smokey Joe.
1. A smoker is basically an outdoor oven that produces smoke.
2. Brisket isn't nearly as difficult as it's made out to be.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Buying Meatheads book and reading all the ig...nant things I have done over the years was a true flash in the brain. Do not know how I ever got by without his great instructions and science regarding various cuts of meat. Went from a pretty good BBQ man to, If I don't mind saying so myself, to a really good grill meister.
Best money I ever spent next to a few dollars I have spent on my wife of 43 years!
- Likes 2
Comment
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Comment