Ok, Iâve been promising to write this one for awhile, and I thought Iâd better get on it before it turned into the âBeginning of the BBQ Seasonâ post. For any of you keeping score out there, I think of my BBQing in seasons. The simple reason being that where I live in Delaware, the winters get to cold for me to drive my smoker to the 225 degrees I need to do BBQ. Itâs far easier to do it in the summer when my smoke box is 120 degrees in the sun with no fire in it. Letâs run down some thoughts and things Iâve learned last season.
First, I seem to have pretty good control of the basic stuff. Smoking sausage, chicken (especially wings), pork loin, turkey legs and the similar are pretty straight forward. I still have things I can learn about seasoning and wood selection, but the basic process is pretty straight forward. Tracey even came across a recipe for smoked round eye thatâs now a regular in my smoking rotation. As to the big stuff like pork shoulder and brisketâ¦
The oven is my friend. Ok, the thundering noise you hear in the distance is all the BBQ purists running over to my house to beat me to death with a bag of hickory chips. And look, nothing is more amazing to me then watching BBQ Pitmasters and seeing Myron Mixon pull off a perfect piece of brisket that heâs been cooking all night in the smoker. But the reality for me is that I donât have the time or fuel to run my smoker for the 12-15 hours thatâs needed to pull that off. Iâm not blessed with groves of hickory or apple trees at my disposal. The bottom line for me is meat will stop taking smoke around 140 degrees, and with the smoke box at 225, the delta T dictates that to get the meat from 150 to 190 (especially brisket which âpausesâ around 154 when cooking) will take more wood than getting the meat from room temp to 140. Iâm sure there is probably a way I could be more effecient in my wood and charcoal use, but I havenât stumbled upon it yet. So in the mean time, I start my meat the night before at around 6pm, smoke it till I need to and then place it in a 225 degree oven over night. By early morning, itâs done and the house smells amazing (take that Yankee Candle Company). As for those mentioned pieces of meatâ¦.
Iâve got the pulled pork thing pretty well down. I can get two very nice sized pork shoulders in my smoker. A generous amount of rub and apple wood smoke and weâre good to go. The oven method above works well, and itâs usually falling apart on its own by the time I pull it out. Iâve been spritzing the shoulders with apple juice during the cooking, but a bartender at Two Stones, suggest I try apple liquor. Not only is the apple flavor more intense, but the added sugar makes the pork bark a little sweeter. Itâs on my âto tryâ list for sure. Then we move on toâ¦.
Brisket. This is the king of kings here, and Iâm close. The oven method works well here, but when I do it I wrap it in aluminum foil with a little beer or apple juice inside to keep things moist. Whatâs been haunting me is controlling the presentation of the final product. Most times when you see BBQ shows on TV, the brisket is sliced like a london broil. But in some places where Iâve had it, itâs shredded like a pulled pork (note : not chopped). The first couple of times Iâve tried it, I ended up with a very nice slicing product. However, the last time I tried it I let the meat finish at 200 degrees instead of 190. I found this shredded a lot better. Whether Iâm on to something or it was a happy accident I wonât know till I try it again, so that will be a topic for a later post. But as we all know, when it comes down to BBQâ¦..
Itâs all about the rub. I really liked my rub this year. I made two varieties, my basic (recipe here) and an âisland rubâ I use for ribs which is my basic rub with some McCormick Grill Masters packets (baja citrus and mojito lime being two of my favorites) in it to give it some citrus flavors. Iâve tended to change the basic recipe from season to season and Iâm sure this year will be no different. Where Iâm going with it I have no idea yet, but Iâm thinking of adding some cumin to it and also maybe some type of sugar â which is something Iâve never put in my rubs. Oh, and did I mention ribsâ¦.
This still seems to be my Achilles heel. Oh, I cook an OK rib. But the process is inconsistent and they never seem to get done in the time frame I think they should. Tracey takes this in stride, joking âItâs ok, Iâm used to eating ribs at 11pmâ, but it would be nice to have this down better. This is the one case where I try to finish them totally in the smoker (or maybe a little toss on the grill) and leave the oven out of the equation. This season I may have pass on the pork shoulder a few times and focus on getting my ribs down.
Well thatâs about where I am coming off of last season. My rubs are almost gone (I use them in just about everything) and I recently took stock of my left over charcoal/wood supplies. Nothing to do now, but wait until spring comes.
Time for another beerâ¦.
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