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Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/27/2025 in all areas

  1. Managed to vent out all the solvent this morning between 6-12 and enjoyed some salmon as a result. In the shade now and plenty of residual heat so got a short rib going low and slow without it breaking a sweat. Unlike me
    2 points
  2. Burn in, curing, venting. Whatever it’s called. Making the most of the heat this morning
    2 points
  3. 00:20 - Category 8 typhoon alert. Shops closed 07:20 - Category 9 typhoon alert. Public transport closed 09:20 - Category 1 hurricane alert. Kamado closed 15:20 - Kamado will re-open Juxtaposition of smoke eddying calmly while tree branches are struggling to stay attached a few feet away kk23hk-001.mp4 kk23hk-002.mp4
    1 point
  4. These didn’t upload Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
    1 point
  5. I too have seen the "too long" effect but less the "too short" effect. I like would expect to guide experiments. Perhaps my favorite BBQ book is Legends of Texas Barbecue by Robb Walsh, although I follow none of its recipes. The stories bring home the attitude and diversity of technique, discovered experimentally, of various cooks. No one to watch the fire while you sleep? Let it die, in a brick-lined wood oven that holds heat well, and build it again in the morning. The meat that comes out is famous. Aaron Franklin of Franklin Barbecue in Austin, Texas generally cooks everything at 275 F. Why? He builds these cookers from 1,000 gallon recycled propane tanks, and he has a restaurant to run. As it happens, I've found 275 F to be a far better universal choice than the 225 F I first learned, though one can learn to work with either. This discussion reminds me most of Neopolitan Pizza discussions. I know an Italian cook who has traveled Italy with an infrared shooter thermometer, and the exalted temperatures people claim to use are relative to where one takes the reading. It's a temptation to latch on to a mythical high temperature as the "proof" one is a great pizza cook, rather than learning what reading works best with one's dough, technique, and cooker. I love that Chris Young's Combustion Engine is a simple dial. I don't expect consistency in someone else's shower, and I expect the numbers I'll use are again just readings, relative to this specific feedback loop. I don't fear that the probe will be "too short" as long as its tip reaches dome air. I do fear that this discussion will spook Chris Young into making us a probe that's "too long", though as you imply the workaround is to be careful how one uses the upper grill. In any case I do intend to take one for the team and buy this setup, after they answer my email.
    1 point
  6. If you want to bake the Napoleon cracker crust pizzas.. I suggest using a baking steel (carbon plate 1/4-1/3"). At 500º, it mimics 900º on a standard baking stone, creating the same leoparding on the crust. My baking stone works beautifully for bread and dough with yeast at about 550-600º. The density of the stone determines how fast it cooks.. Heat transfer.
    1 point
  7. Before I got a wood-burning pizza oven, I used @tony b's technique in the KK: 550°F dome, heat-soak for an hour, pizza stone on the top grate (later I used the pizza stone topped with a baking steel, which enabled a bit more leoparding on the bottom without burning the top), and let the KK recover about 8-10 minutes between pizza launches. I made mostly NY-style or Chicago deep dish. One can't (or at least I couldn't) make a true Neapolitan on a KK. Or maybe because I was unwilling to risk running my KK at 900°F. 00 flour doesn't work as well below 750°F. As Tony said, you have to match the dough / flour to the temperature you plan to use. As I remember, large lump charcoal made it easier to achieve and maintain the temp. I have a KK23 so the KK32 may be a little different.
    1 point
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