jeffshoaf
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Everything posted by jeffshoaf
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I've been clipping my pit probe to whichever meat probe is closet to the center of grate. I was clipping it to the grate itself but the clip attachment that came with the guru was a bit too small to reliably latch onto the grate.
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Vermicular Cast Iron Induction Cooker
jeffshoaf replied to PVPAUL's topic in Relevant Product Reviews
I looked at these months back and was intrigued, but i misinterpreted the pricing - thought the price for the kamodo didn't include the pot, putting the price for both over $1000. After reading through this thread, i realized my mistake and checked it out again. Mine was delivered on December 4th. I'm happy with it so far, but haven't had much luck finding a forum to share ideas and techniques for using it but did find a Facebook group - it's not very active with just 2 members before i joined. If you do the Facebook thing and wanna share, please join: https://www.facebook.com/groups/715840642295686 -
You're supposed to clean your grill grates? 🙂
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For peach pits, i was thinking about contacting an orchard that also sells peach products to see what they do with their pits. They're several hours away so i was hoping to get an idea on the feasibility of using them in my KK. If the pits are relatively fresh, i could dry them in a dehydrator.
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Anybody tried smoking with materials other than wood? I'm thinking of things like peach pits of pecan shells.
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It was seriously tasty - I ate too much and was miserable. No brine, just a dusting of garlic powder, salt, and pepper.
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No foil, rib rack on main grill. I usually just eyeball them after 4 hours, I like them to be just to the point before they're falling of the bone; Dennis recommends a "bend" test and has pictures posted here somewhere.
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I've been lucky finding really meaty ribs lately, so I've been going simple: salt, pepper, and garlic powder smoked low and slow with the heat deflector and drip pan at 225 for 4 hours or so. I do my jerky in a dehydrator. The last few batches came out really good after marinating in honey, cayenne, and fennel seeds. Gotta water down the honey so it's thin and soaks in.
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Simple rub (salt, pepper, garlic powder), 4.5 hours at 225 degrees with Apple wood chunks. The spare ribs were pretty and tasty. In fact, they were pretty tasty!
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Check out the Instant Pot too - 2 pressure settings, 7 functions.
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I'm a big proponent of pressure cooking, especially during the work week when I don't have a lot of time to cook. I used a modern stove top cooker for a couple of years, but got an Instant Pot appliance recently. It's touted as a 7 in one cooker - pressure, slow, rice, steamer, saute, yogurt, and one more that I can't remember. I've used it for pressure and slow cooking, and the saute mode for browning meat prior to pressure or slow cooking. It's really nice to come home from work, dump in some dried beans, a bit of pork, spices and water and have a nice pot of beans in 25 minutes - less if I planned ahead and had the beans soaking.
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As long as the fire wasn't started by someone trying out your kk...
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I've had good luck lately just distributing the wood chunks thru the charcoal, but I've seen temperature fluctuations as the large chunks catch fire. That has got me wondering if soaking the chunks might help - I know it won't make the chunks produce more smoked, but it might help delay the wood from starting to smoke during preheat and/or help delay ignition.
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I do count hotboxing as storage and have used it for both butts and ribs - it's just short-term storage! I have a small cooler that is just the right size for two butts with two towels.
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I generally go simple since I had a few experiments fail due to rubs and sauces overpowering the meat. My last few rib cooks just used salt, pepper, and garlic powder, slow cooked with heart deflector and drip pan over charcoal and some hickory and Apple wood, 225 - 250 for 4 or 5 hours. I didn't even monitor the meat temp this round. Foil is for storing, not cooking! I usually make my own sauce based on tomatoes, honey, and molasses, but I was otherwise occupied and dipped these in Bone Sucking Sauce from the grocery store. Very happy (and full) with the results.
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It's to hold the thermometer to the lip of a pot. It will hold your thermometer to your kk, but a lot of us don't so we can't easily remove the thermometer when doing high temp cooks. Sent from my Nexus 10 using Tapatalk
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Paper towel holders and trash cans! Sent from my AT100 using Tapatalk
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I guess we need to define "a lot"! A butt will cover the bottom of the drip pan to a substantial fraction of an inch - I'd consider that "a lot", but a couple of small racks of babybacks will just leave a couple of puddles on the diffuser - not what I'd call "a lot".
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Yep - indirect, no drop pan. I typically only use a drip pan if I'm expecting a lot of drippage.
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Looks like my local grocery chain has switched suppliers of babybacks and the new ones are some of the meatiest ribs I've ever had. They were on sale this week, so I fixed a small rack for myself and another for my mother Groundhog Day eve. I over-spiced the last batch of babybacks I cooked, so went simple with this round: Just salt and pepper with a couple of chunks of apple wood and a handful of hicory chips. 4 hours at 240 or so - nice and tender, but not "fall of the bone". I had intended on letting them go another hour, but my stomach was growling...
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But she's didn't say I'd be invited to the parties and gatherings!