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  1. Today
  2. Yesterday loafs for friends. I’ve been eating. Little less bread as I’m trying to keep my weight down due to BP issue 😵‍💫 But I typically feed my starter once a week and keep it in the fridge. These are just my standard loafs, nothing fancy.
  3. Yesterday
  4. Those muffins look almost as sad as the ones my wife typically buys. I made these to show her a real muffin. Problem is…I think I just signed myself up to a new weakly (not misspelled) duty. 😳
  5. Or perhaps just keep the "warding off evil spirits" project separate from the "cooking food" project...
  6. Halo 4B is amazing you will love it. It’s a lot more than just a smash burger and breakfast maker. We just last night used it to blacken some swordfish steaks and wife said the best she ever had. Enjoy 😉
  7. Low and slow sauce making on the 32. The first is a simple beef ragu that I cooked for eight hours and the second is some soffritto that cooked for four hours. The latter came off the KK at close to midnight, too late for me to care about taking any more pics! And yes, there is a lot of olive oil in that soffritto. It takes on an amazing flavour from the vegetables and imparts a lovely unctuousness to the ragu di corte that I will be making next.
  8. Even these upmarket supermarket muffins don't look anywhere as tempting as yours @Pequod. For reference, some crumpets. Great when dripping with butter.
  9. Thanks @Tyrus. I looked up "burning olive leaves" and got lots of hits for Cypriots burning olive leaves to ward off evil spirits. That would seem to tie in with your view about acrid smoke - evil spirits are unlikely to like a cloud of smoke coming at them. I might just abandon that idea without ever trying it!
  10. Last week
  11. I just had my Ha!o 4b delivered last week and converted it to natural gas last Thursday - I've had my Fontana pizza oven for several years now. Looks like we're about synced up!
  12. @jeffshoaf @Tyrus thanks guys for all the great info. Your cooks look amazing. We are building and my wife strongly suggested we wait until our new home is completed. She’s right the rental we are temporally living in has enough stuff to cook on. KK, 4B Halo, Fontana Pizza Oven. Isn’t is amazing how the cooking bug bites and we can’t get enough. Keep sharing and keep smoking!
  13. Hey @DennisLinkletterDennis L - again thanks for the intel - now back from beautiful Cleveland, I do have a couple of questions as we wrap up this topic. Actually, I haven't had any issues starting the KK or dialing in a temp. I will however, only start the charcoal in the middle (1 orange size) moving forward per you suggestion. I don't use the lower grate for cooking low and slow only for searing either with the splitter or without. Agree, not interested in ramping up the temp to 600f - that was just a test and I was lucky I didn't have to chase the temp down since the KK was not yet heat soaked. One area for clarity is when we cook with the splitter in a 2 zone set up, I believe many others including myself may be doing this incorrectly. Scenario, right handed so cold side of splitter on my right. I have put the foil on the middle grate on the cold side and upper grate for the protein but ALSO on the cold side. I believe you wrote somewhere the best set up to eliminate uneven indirect cooks is to always cook on the coal or hot side separated by foil deflector in a 2 zone set up. Is this correct? Lately, I have not used the splitter and just cook indirect center grate top and deflector center middle. Seems to give me a better crispy outside or bark on beef. lastly, as far as having fun... I LOVE cooking in the KK any chance I can get.
  14. I've always used wood chunks or tiny splits stacked inside the MSR, all thats left is charcoal pieces, have never used any screen and it's never clogged. Maybe with pellets because they have little continuity and once consumed only ash remains. Good luck
  15. i actually just made it so i have no idea how it will hold, but it's thin stainless so probably not a long time. but if it works well, i will be in pursuit for a more sturdier lunch box as my grill is too small to accommodate bigger smoke pots. curious to know how long it lasts in such a little box. the empty side is for the punched holes. left empty so ash or pellets don't clog it. the divider is adjustable but after applied heat, i doubt that thin divider will even hold shape..
  16. Whatever floats your boat David...light years ahead of those perforated cylinders that they place in pellet and gas grills. It checks the boxes, so is it reusable and how does the gasket hold up? What's up with the empty side? Longevity looks to be a concern, would it remain dimensional stable under heat and retain it's shape under a number of cooks?
  17. Hate to be a pest Tekebo but I have to warn you about the leaves. Around here were allowed each year to burn outdoors before April 1st any accumulation of twigs and branches that have come down during the fall and winter season. You have to call into the fire dept for permission if you choose to burn, keep in mind there are rules. One of them is that leaves are prohibited, the smoke instant, thick, acrid and makes a quick flying ash that is dangerous and they fill the neighborhood with a thick smoke. I don't think any leafy parts would do you well and could spoil a well layed out cook. Now I know nothing of olive leaves and what bouquet they may in part, however those chips look good for the pot.
  18. will this work as a smoking bento box or am i dellusional? the red caulk is high temp silicon there is a divider in the box to keep the pellets from covering the holes. the divider does not hit the ceiling of the lid. there are two 1/8” holes on the empty side
  19. Great looking muffins you have there !!!!
  20. No olive wood here but I have used grape vine too. I lay some in the middle of the lump and it catches gradually throughout a long cook. I typically add it for long cooks like pork butts along with peach wood. If you add a lot it smells really nice in the yard , I think it smells like a really really light version of apple😁
  21. it's crazy you guys burn olive wood. they are so expensive to buy at the garden shop here. like thousands for a living olive tree..
  22. I think you are right about the olive wood that we chipped @Tyrus. I will keep shaking the bucket and it should be dry quite quickly. As you can see from the picture above, the wood that we harvested is a relatively small haul. Just one cook's worth I reckon. I was going to throw away the leafy twigs on the right but I am wondering if they would do well on the fire once dried. I love the idea of food flavoured with a wonderful, gentle Mediterranean smell.
  23. Those are definitely English muffins @Pequod and they look delicious! I now have a craving. Will get you a pic of a crumpet when I next make it to the supermarket. Crumpet is also slang for a good looking lady but I won't be posting a pic of her!
  24. Have you a chop saw/miter saw? Slice the pieces to 1/2 in and keep them dry and allow air to flow around them. You'll be using them this summer,
  25. Sourdough English Muffins with 10% fresh milled spelt. No idea what these are called in England. Muffins? Crumpets? Little hunks o’ bread? I should look that up.
  26. That sounds great @skoell! I suspect I can smoke the wood chips sooner than I can burn the logs. Looking forward to that.
  27. 1-2 years ago I bought a box of olive wood for smoking. I have to say I liked it. It was pretty much what chat gpt said, light, fruity flavor that smells like summer can't beat the smell when sitting on the patio and smoking some ribs with olive wood!
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