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Parrothead72

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Posts posted by Parrothead72

  1. Rocked some more pig candy. Modest additions to the recipe. After a night of marinating in the syrup and rub, I put some brown sugar and some more rub on just before smoking. Used hickory and smoked at 225 for about 3 hours. Rotating the trays and turning the bacon over once. Best so far. Sinfully good.

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    Note the NY Ranger mug and the Fireball! We did the polar bear plunge yesterday!

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  2. Slight update. Did the cook again. This time no rib rack. I preferred it. Ribs flat on the main grill. Think the smoke was better and more spacing between the ribs. I used the rack incorrectly on the last cook and put the ribs too close together.

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  3. Have had my 23" KK for just about a year but regrettably have never done ribs. Purchased 11 lbs (3 racks) worth at Costco. Pork Loin Ribs. Rubbed them with 3 different rubs of mine and used French's yellow mustard to adhere the rubs. No silver skin to remove - Costco's ribs come that way! Below are the rubs I used (one from Lamberts in TX called Sweet Rub of mine, one from Fresh Direct called Everything Rub and lastly Jeff's rub from the Smoking Meat forum.

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    Heat soaked at 250 for 2 hours.

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    Used Apple Wood after I heat soaked.

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    Placed Dennis' rib rack on the main grill and used a foil pan on top of the stone deflector for drippings.

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    Put the ribs in 3 straight grooves on the rib rack - not sure I liked that idea in retrospect. Not ideal for smoke flow....

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    Cooked for nearly 5 hours at 240* Ribs were A+ good. Only change I would make is space them better on the rib rack and maybe that impacted the fact they weren't quite as crispy as I would have liked.

    That said, my wife loved them and she normally can't stand ribs!

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    All in all, quite happy. 

  4. 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.

    May do some tomorrow. Any foil? Guess it is hard to cook ribs to a temp so how do you know? Just a feel thing? I am going to use the rib rack on the main grill. Maybe a fruit wood like cherry or apple. Any need to brine? Mop? Thanks kindly. Merry Christmas.

  5. Have made his twice and think I am close to making something quite decadent. Pig candy.

    1) store bought bacon, nothing fancy, Oscar Meyer or whatever, regular cut not thick cut

    2) in a Pyrex square pan, Kay out the bacon in ling strips and drizzle with maple syrup and hand rub (ingredients below) with a good dusting

    3) repeat by layering it a few times like you were making a bacon lasagna (I used two packs of Oscar Meyer)

    4) I let the Pyrex sit at room temp for the flavors to absorb maybe 4 hours or so - no magic there

    5) heat soaked the KK at 225 dome and some ECC with apple wood

    6) put the bacon on 4 Bradley racks I bought on Amazon and transported them to the KK where I laid them on the main grill and staked them

    7) after 90 minutes I rearranged the racks so the one on the main grill became the one on the top of the pile

    8) another 90 minutes or so and bam!

    9) took the Bradley racks off, tented the stack of them in tin foil and let them cool and harden a bit

    10) simply to die for - Bacon candy!

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    As for the rub, I used brown sugar, paprika, cayenne, onion powder, garlic powder, salt and pepper. Can forward if anyone cares for the measurements.

    • Like 1
  6. Noel, did you cook indirect or direct heat? Another question, did you you foil at 160 or leave the brisket on the grate until it reached 200 and then pulled to foil? Did you spray anything on the brisket during the cook? Thanks

    Craig

    Hi Craig. Never sprayed anything. I've found with the KK there has been no need for me to do so. I've not had anything dry ever. Maybe my palette isn't the most sophisticated but....

    I re read my notes and it was off at 197 and rested in foil for 30 minutes indoors. No cooler.

    • Like 1
  7. Shut down the vents and break out a little tile cleaner that we just so happen to use in the bathroom.....nothing fancy....give her a lit shine once in a while....speaking of your red dirt..... I love red dirt, gritty country music....shames those twangy Nashville folks.... I spend a lot of my time in Austin and fell in love with the whole outlaw music scent - REK, Gary P, McMurtry, Ray Wylie, JJW, good stuff if it appeals to you...


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    • Like 1
  8. Hi all. Cooked a 4 lb beef brisket flat this weekend after the tryptophan wore off from Thanksgiving....

     

    Brined it for 12 hours in OJ (quart), Habanero tabasco (2 Tbsp) and 1/4 cup of Kosher Salt. Poured the brine into a Ziploc and let it marinate overnight.

     

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    Rubbed it (after patting it dry) with a liberal amount of yellow mustard and then a homemade rub (cup of dk brown sugar, 1/2 cup paprika, 2 tbsp coarse black pepper, 1.5 tsp chili powder, 1.5 tbsp garlic powder, 1.5 tbsp onion powder, 1 tsp cayenne pepper, 2 tbsp kosher salt.

     

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    Heat soaked the KK for an hour and brought it up to about 250* (thermometer) but the iGrill read 275* or so on the main grill surface. Did so with some ECC in the fire basket and 2 wax cubes (leave the dome open once I light them to get the fire going for a few minutes).

     

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    Added a mix of apple, cherry and hickory wood (chunk of each).
     
    Let the KK go for about 7.5 hours (followed progress on my iGrill). Interesting that the meat plateau effect kicked in and took 2-3 hours at 160* where we simply moved sideways (all the heat being used to convert collagen to gelatin).  Disconcerting because you think your cook isn't going well when you see it move laterally for so long but sure enough after some time it busted through the plateau and kept on climbing.
     
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    Now don't laugh at me but it was pitch black when I took the brisket off the KK and when my iGrill read 200*. Wrapped it in foil and then in some towels and let it rest for an hour.
     
    Sliced it against the grain and 24 hours later it is all gone.
     
    Absolutely phenomenal. Tender. Moist. Juicy. Not a huge smoke ring and a wonderful flavor without anything too overpowering.
     
    Sorry for not having more photos.
     
    Next up - a whole packer brisket and my goal of doing some burnt ends!
     
    Special thanks to Robert (user 5698k) for all his help and advice on this cook and a bunch of others.
     
    - Noel
     
     

     

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