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john noble

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About john noble

  • Rank
    Junior Member
    Newbie
  • Birthday 05/23/1961

core_pfieldgroups_99

  • Location
    Vancouver, BC, Canada
  • Interests
    Sailing, cooking, travel, jazz piano.
  • Occupation
    Private banking
  1. Re: Lighting Looftlighter the Looflighter is perfectly good. However I use a long pole, weed burner when grilling. Similar concept to the Looflighter, actually, since you are pushing hot air over the coals. Touching the flame over the coals gets it started, but even when the flame is several inches away, the hot rushing air does a great job of accelerating the burn. For low n slow, I use the minion method, which means using the chimney. And for lighting the chimney, I use TrueCue match starters. Anyone else use these? A small pyramid shape of wax and sawdust. and a match tip at the end. you strike it on the box, the tip flares up and you just rest it under the chimney. Super cheap and no petroleum smells.
  2. Re: Full size KK cabinet with Cobalt Blue tile insert HI Dennis. Great cabinet photos. I'd like to order just the tiles. Ones that match my KK. I'm building my own outdoor teak cabinet. I am recycling some old kitchen cabinet doors that are solid teak. Just a simple cabinet, using the existing rectangle door shapes If I can purchase the tiles from you, I'll just set the tiles on the cabinet surface and have my heat proof surface. Let me know if this is doable. It's Dark Metallic Bronze. And if we're doing a shipment anyway, can you ship come coconut coal up to Vancouver, Canada? Thanks
  3. I agree with the comments here, that one can easily do high temp grilling on a KK. But it does take up a lot of charcoal. Yes, I know we can extinguish a fire, but it's not immediate. If we want to heat up the whole KK, that will use up charcoal, and afterward, even with air vents tightly closed, the residual oxygen and thermal energy will burn up some more charcoal. I have found that using a wire column to hold a tiny pile of charcoal will create plenty of heat, due to the chimney effect. Even a weber chimney is too big. I use one of those open cylinder racks designed to hold tall wooden spoons and spatchulas. Ignite the bottom of the pile and place the sear grill just above it. A couple of steaks can be grilled quickly. I'm sure there are other ways. What do the rest of us do?
  4. Re: tight top vent I know what you mean. after removing the food and closing it, I intend to come back and make sure it's tight and extinguished. But I often forget, and then lose a basket of lump as a result.
  5. Ok, so for the first time, I managed to extinguish a cook and find unburned charcoal the next morning. I realize I have not been closing the top vent tight enough. In the past, I would find that the "leftover" charcoal was burned to ashes. Last night I cranked the top vent tightly closed, and success. This morning a huge pile of unused charcoal awaited me.
  6. Hello all. Now in my third happy week of KK ownership. Up here in the rainy pacific northwest, am now very glad I installed an awning above my bbq workspace. But my question is about oils. When starting a cook, I wipe the grill with a paper towel soaked in Canola oil. This used to be called rapeseed oil. Just the seed from a tall grass. Very cheap. Neutral taste. It's the oil used in Pam. I like wiping down the grill before cooking. It makes it a bit cleaner, and seems to help prevent food from sticking. And after the quick wipedown, I use the crumpled paper towel as my fire starter. The oil makes the paper "wick" and makes for a long burn under the charcoal. I know many of us on this listserve start the fire this way. But is canola the best for wiping down the grill before a cook? I know every oil reacts differently to different temperatures. And some may burn off, and some are more likely to go rancid. Some may add flavour, some might not. Anyway. Looking forward to your comments about the best oil for this purpose.
  7. Re: Covering your KK While awaiting the arrival of my KK, I had an awning installed over the area of the deck where the KK would stand. I also ordered one of those excellent covers. Both were made with the exact same Sunbrella colour cloth. If I am going away for a week or two, I'll cover up the KK. But she is under the shade of the Sunbrella awning, and I really like to see that beautiful thing out there. Maybe I'll research a uv blocking wax for the tiles.
  8. Re: Assembling the rotisserie basket Job's products only seem cooler and indie, 'cause he's underground. Ooops, too soon?
  9. Re: Assembling the rotisserie basket Aha. Yes, that's how they slide on. Thanks Dennis. How about someone does a youtube instructional video of them using all aspects of this machine? No, not just anyone, some beautiful balinese ladies. We'd all watch that, and Dennis wouldn't have to write so many emails.
  10. Re: Assembling the rotisserie basket Ok.... but there are two spots where the rod is milled thin, and I have three of the wire holderdownthings. also, the thin milled rod is at the outside ends. trying to imagine how this hooks up. I'll go looking for pics. thanks for the quick response though.
  11. So I have the large basket with three of those clamps that look like big chicken feet, to hold the bird in place Having trouble affixing the clamp to the basket. I see that the end of the clamp is open, and clan snap on the basket's bars, but wow it's going to take a big hammer. way more than hand tight. Before I go and bash it, any comments please? thanks
  12. Re: Fully Open Top Damper Cooking Method (experiental) I think mguerra was talking about using a minion method to keep the fire slow. I can see how in just an hour, the top down burn would not have time to get roaring. Eventually though, with both top and bottom vents open, I think things would get pretty hot. I did chicken last night, trying it on the upper grill as suggested. And yes, the radiant heat from above, cooked it so well from both sides that I did not need to turn the chicken. It was spatchcocked and then the halves separated. Skin side up, simple spicing and the skin was brown and crispy just from the ceiling's radiant heat. Nice. And yes, 'with an open top vent, no sooty or smokey flavours in the chicken. I didn't do a minion method though. Blasted it with a weed torch. So I did have to back down the bottom vent a bit.
  13. Re: Hawaiian Luau/Kalua pork How interesting. So that is why people in tropical countries wrap meat in banana leaves. They are preventing the "stall". They didn't have tin foil, but have figured out how to prevent evaporative cooling. Living in Canada, I"m envious of you banana growers. I wonder what we have here that could replace tin foil? A pile of maple leaves? Kelp leaves? The Coast Salish natives up here in the pacific northwest, would cut up fish and other meats into fist sized pieces, wrap them in kelp, and cook many of them in sand pits on the beach, along with buried hot rocks.
  14. Re: Must Read "physicist-cracks-bbq-mystery" There's something amazing that happens whenever yeast meets grain. And it's all about external digestion, perhaps the one thing that separates home sapiens from the rest. We use enzymes to break down hard grains so we can digest them with our single stomachs. We use fermenting yeasts to further break down long carbohydrate chains. We use fungi to break down long cellulose chains in compost heaps to make black soil to nourish our crops. And we use enzymes in meat to break down collagen. In all cases we provide a little bit of heat. The brewer cooking his mash, the baker warming his pans, the farmer keeping his steaming compost under warm cover, and the chef adding just a touch of coal to his fire. And wasn't it the chef who was the source for all our technology? The chef who moved from cooking over an open fire, to enclosing the fire with stones, to accidentally firing the clay lining around the fire so that it lifted out in one piece and magically, held water. To melting glazes to cover the clay, to melting copper for decoration, then melting iron ore, then accidentally mixing charcoal with the iron to create carbon steel. To heating water in the strong steel pots and seeing that the sudden expansion of steam would turn a wheel. And seeing that these spinning wheels, when spinning a magnetic lodestone, would create a magical flow of electricity. And away we go. Cooking meat over a fire. It all comes from there. So yes, I agree with Sysygies. Bad technique in attentive hands is good technique. The person who did brisket "wrong" with high heat and foiling, created something wonderful. When I play piano and hit a wrong note, it's a wrong note. But if I hit it twice and with attention, hey, it's jazz.
  15. Re: Must Read "physicist-cracks-bbq-mystery" I think what is so good about understanding the stall, is that it gives us choices. Now that we understand the underlying process behind the stall, we might choose sometimes to go for maximum bark and to hell with the loss of moisture and juiciness. At other times we may choose to foil and make it as moist and juicy as we can. As Michael says, do it both ways. And then there is the compromise, foiling briefly. I'm interested in the idea of temporarily foiling when the meat hits 160F, to interrupt what would become the evaporative cooling effect, and speed the meat through the stall zone. But then once I'm on the other side of the stall zone, at 170 or 180, to remove the foil. Would this maximize both juiciness and bark? Must find out.
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