Monday, February 8, 2010

WSM Smoked Turkey And Salmon Superbowl Sunday

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For Superbowl Sunday BBQ I am cooking two Pre-Brined Turkeys and a fillet of Steelhead Salmon on the Weber Smokey Mountain (WSM). I am trying another injection to marinate one of the turkeys. It is Tony Chachere's Butter Creole Injectable that included a injector with the marinade.



The rub that I am putting on the Salmon will be a light combination of Golden Brown Sugar, Granulated Garlic, Fresh Ground Pepper, Salt, Light Dusting Of BBQ Rub and that is it. It needs very little and the end product will be fantastic. Even those who do not eat Salmon normally always try this and usually have seconds and are surprised they like it so much. I can eat Salmon all day so I love it, smoking it is a bonus and this is just the appetizer version.



The Turkeys cooked fairly fast as the Smoker temperature was 350° for several hours and overall was on the WSM for around 4 hours total. I added a few fist size Hickory pieces to 2 full chimneys of Charcoal and still had plenty fuel left. The Turkeys were once again outstanding. I am beginning to prefer just to season the Turkeys with dry rub and other herbs as I feel it gives excellent results. The injection marinade from Tony Chachere's was just ok. I only used 1/2 to 3/4 of the bottle and the Turkey was plenty saturated with enough as it was. The main difference was the texture, taste wise they're both delicious. and each was very moist. It would be hard to really change the excellent taste of just adding a brined Turkey to the WSM with a little seasoning under the skin and dusted on top and inside the cavity. You really can't go wrong with a Turkey on the WSM and I enjoy trying new marinades, spices, herbs and will continue to mix it up.





There were plenty of Turkey and side dishes for leftovers. The Turkey carcasses will be used to make Turkey Stock and this will go into a 7 Bean Soup I'll make later. I also will make another soup this time using noodles, celery, and carrots with the Turkey stock and meat.

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Saturday, September 19, 2009

Smoked Meatloaf - Bacon Wrapped and Other Versions Weekend Smoke

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I haven't done Meatloaf on the WSM (Weber Smokey Mountain) in quite a long time so while I was at the store I picked up the necessary ingredients and thought I would add a little variety to the cook this time by adding a few more ingredients. I purchased  4lbs Ground Beef, 2lbs Ground Pork, 1lb Bacon, Red and White Onions, Zucchini and the rest of the ingredients I already had at home.

So with the amount of meat that I purchased I was going to make two separate loaves and try different ingredients in each. While this would be fine, I figured what the heck, I'll make 4 different loaves and see if I come across anything that is remarkably better than the other Meatloaves that I've had. A quick look around the kitchen to see what I had and I was off with my plan. Here is what I came up with for the 4 loaves. Before adding the unique ingredients of each I mixed all the meat together with the sautéed onions, red bell peppers, garlic, then ground pepper, corn flakes, saltines, oats, then lightly dusted with BBQ rub I had left from the Butt/Chuck smoke, after mixing with my hands I then added 6 beaten eggs and sectioned off 4 pieces to make the individual 4 loaves:


Meatloaf #1 - Double OG (onion garlic)

  • red and white onions diced (doubled)
  • garlic freshly minced (doubled)
  • red bell peppers diced
  • corn flakes, saltines, oats
  • eggs beaten
  • bacon wrap
Meatloaf #2 - Zucchini Mushroom

  • red and white onions diced 
  • garlic freshly minced
  • red bell peppers diced
  • corn flakes, saltines, oats
  • eggs beaten
  • zucchini diced
  • mushrooms diced
  • bacon wrap
Meatloaf #3 - Jalapeño

  • red and white onions diced
  • garlic freshly minced 
  • red bell peppers diced
  • corn flakes, saltines, oats
  • eggs beaten
  • jalapeño fresh (2) de-seeded diced
Meatloaf #4 - Salsa, Black Beans & Cilantro

  • red and white onions diced 
  • garlic freshly minced 
  • red bell peppers diced
  • corn flakes, saltines, oats
  • eggs beaten
  • salsa
  • black beans
  • cilantro fresh
  • chili spices(new mex, ancho pasilla)

After all the loaves where formed I placed each on wax paper and lightly dusted with BBQ rub.




The WSM was filled with 1.25 chimneys of Kingsford charcoal and Cherry and Hickory wood chunks. It was at 325° when I placed the waterless foiled pan on and then on the lower grate I added the Salsa Bean and the Jalapeño loaves. The upper grate was installed and the 2 bacon wrapped loaves (zucchi-mushroom, doubleOG) went on. I placed a probe in one of the loaves on the lower grate and one probe to the upper loaf to monitor temperatures.


First basting with the 2 different glazes came on when the loaves hit 155°, the WSM smoker was running around 295°. The bottom loaves got a glaze of ketchup and Tapatio hot sauce, chile powders. The upper loaves got a glaze of BBQ sauce, Ketchup, brown sugar.


After around 10-15 additional minutes the loaves reached an internal of 165° and I removed them from the smoker. The rested with a aluminum foil lightly covering the top then sliced and sampled. My impressions were the additional spices and salt could have easily been increased to all the loaves. Each had a very mild taste as I was very light on adding spices. There was no clear winner out of the 4 loaves we tried. Perhaps when the second or the third servings are devoured we'll have a favorite. The Jalapeño was not spicy at all and I could've increased the amount added to that loaf. The Salsa bean loaf flavor wasn't nearly as flavorful as I thought it would be with the strong ingredients added, especially the chili powder. They each were very delicious and had great smoke flavor and added depth with the glaze and different ingredients. I'm looking forward to the arduous task of judging the leftovers until they're finished.


Bacon Wrapped Double Onion Garlic & Zucchini Mushroom Meatloaf



Salsa Black Bean Cilantro & Jalapeño Meatloaf


Bacon Wrap Zucchini Mushroom Sliced


Salso Black Bean Cilantro Sliced


Jalapeño Sliced

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

WSM - Pork Butt and Beef Chuck Roast Weekend Smoke

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I purchased 3 Picnic Pork Butts and 1 Beef Chuck Roast for dinner this Sunday evening. I fully plan on having lots of leftovers and will vacuum seal most with the Foodsaver. I am getting a very late start this Sunday as it is almost noon. Didn't feel like doing my traditional overnight due to several factors including the wind and light rain that started late last night. We have an overcast day today but the wind has died down and a only a little chance of rain in evening.




I set up the WSM (Weber Smoky Mountain) with two chimneys full of unlit Kingsford charcoal and then added my smoke wood, 2  pieces of Hickory, 1 piece of Apricot, 3 pieces of Cherry wood. I foiled a water pan to obtain higher cook temperatures since I'm short on time. My usual plan would be adding the larger Brinkmann water pan filled with warm water and relax for a 12-14hr cook at 220°-230°. I currently have the 3 bottom vents open at 50/50/0 and I am more than likely going to have to adjust the vents in the cook to start low and based on time open them up to speed the cook. The WSM was running 270° so I then changed vents to 50/0/0. I don't want to be outside tending the cook and pulling pork late in the evening but for the most part I'll just let the WSM do it's thing. Meat temperatures are being monitored remotely with my Maverick thermometer with 2 probes. One is being used on the upper Pork Butt and the other in the Beef Chuck roast also on the upper grate. Made a quick rub with the following:

  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1/4 kosher salt
  • 3 TBS turbinado sugar
  • 3 TBS granulated garlic
  • 3 TBS granulated onion
  • 2 TBS new mexico chile fresh ground
  • 2 TBS ancho pasilla chile fresh ground
  • 2 TBS minced dried garlic
  • 1 TBS coarse ground black pepper
  • 1 TBS oregano dried
  • 3 tsp old bay seasoning
  • 2 tsp thyme
  • 2 tsp all spice
  • 2 tsp cumin
  • 2 tsp seasoning salt



Will update as the cook progresses -

Here is the beer assortment that my Brother brought over, he's running another Triathlon this weekend so no brew for him. I've had some of these before but the new ones are the Don De Dieu and the little Budda (novelty -lucky drink co. china). others - Celebrator  / AfflingemSamuel Smith



Updated 2pm - Beef was at 168° so I decided to pull it off take a few pics, foil it, then return it to the smoker until fork tender. Pork is at 155°ish


Updated 2:45pm - WSM @ 265° and upper pork @ 164°


Updated 3:20pm - WSM @ 255° opened and checked tenderness of Beef and used fork to sample end cut - delicious and internal 210°, lots of juice! I decided to leave the beef, pork looks good, put the other probe in one of the lower pork to get temps.  Upper pork 168° lower pork 162°



Update 4:30pm - WSM @ 260° - fork tender throughout, removed top foil and sample for snacking. Ready to remove and then add more pics.


Update 5:05pm  - WSM @ 270° - took off the Beef Chuck and brought inside to rest. It didn't get a lot of rest, constant fingers taking samples off. Made a couple tacos while still monitoring temps of Pork.

Corn tortillas in a pan with a tad butter to warm them up, added pulled beef when I could stop putting directly into my mouth, fresh jalapeños diced with onions and tomatoes, cilantro, queso fresco cheese, cheddar, hot sauce red, green sauce




Update End Of Cook - Pork was taken off the smoker around 5:50pm and foiled and place back on the smoker. I would have preferred not to foil the Pork as normally done during my other low and slow cooks. Finally at 7:10-7:50pm I took the foiled Pork off and left them rest. Pulled the Pork later and noticed almost no fat, all rendered off very well, only thing that really got thrown away was the bones that came out very easily. Good Pork Picnics that are cooling off in the fridge and most will go into vacuum sealed Foodsaver bags with ample amount saved for meals in the fridge separately.

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Monday, September 7, 2009

Smoked Turkey Injection Seasoning - Labor Day Weekend

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Finally got around to smoking another Turkey in the WSM (Weber Smokey Mountain) cooker. The last Turkey that I smoked was last year, during thanksgiving where I did a total of two in the smoker. And we did a traditional oven cooked Turkey for a total of three.

This Labor Day weekend I smoked an injected Turkey. The injection included the following:
  • 1/4 Apple Juice
  • 1/4 Cup Butter
  • 1 tsp Granulated Garlic
  • 1 tsp Granulated Onion
  • 1 tsp New Mexico Chile powder
  • 1/2 tsp Cayenne Pepper
Following the injection I next added BBQ rub both over the entire Turkey and under the skin near the breast. The first rub was one of my own from another cook and the second was a light sprinkling of Tony Chachere's which is a very salty rub, so I used it sparingly. The Turkey was then returned to the fridge as I got the WSM ready.




 WSM was setup using a chimney of Kingsford lit, another chimney of kingsford on top, and finally the smoke wood was added. So the fire had the following

  • (2) chimneys - 12lbs approx Kingsford
  • (3) Cherry wood chunks
  • (2) Apricot wood chunks(one added later)


Foiled empty water pan, and an empty aluminum disposable pan to catch drippings and to hold turkey trimmings. The Turkey was then added to the top grate on the WSM and during this windy day the somewhat protected WSM was hovering around 300° with 1 vent off and 2 others at 50% open. I was using a Maverick remote temperature probe that was placed in the thicker part of the Turkey breast with the alarm set to notify at 160° internal. The entire cook was completed in 3 hours, a little faster then needed as the guests were arriving later then anticipated. So the Turkey was removed when the breast was in between 164°-170° and then it was wrapped snuggly in aluminum foil and placed in a cooler with two larger towels above and below to maintain heat. It held it's heat pretty well considering after we had worked all the appetizers and various other treats we finally got around to having our larger meal. After 4 hours the Turkey was still hot but could be carefully handled without burning when trimming.



Other meal items prepared where 10lbs Russet potatoes with additional Yams added then lightly mashed with butter, pepper, salt, granulated garlic. The gravy was comprised on the Turkey giblets and the drippings from the pan that was underneath the Turkey in the smoker. The drippings were very salty as expected mostly due to the Tony Chachere's rub I placed liberally in the body cavity. Also in the gravy were the pan leftovers from the ABT's (stuffed jalapeños) that were cooked in the oven so there was a lot of charred goodness from that. Cornbread that was cooked in the oven and had additional jalapeños and green onions added. A side salad with mixed greens, apples, walnuts, red onions and a raspberry vinaigrette.

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Sunday, August 30, 2009

WSM - Whole Beef Brisket, Chicken Quarters and ABT's

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Well the weekend has arrived! The Beef Brisket prices around my area haven't been on sale for quite awhile but I picked a whole un-trimmed packer Beef Brisket 12+lbs @ $2.22lb, which was a lot less then several other large supermarkets.


Prep and Rub



Purchased 2 packages of dried chiles. Pasilla Ancho and New Mexico chiles. Even though they are dried they contain a lot of moisture so I cut open the chiles and de-seeded them and then placed on a cookie sheet into a 220° oven for 20mins. After they are left out to cool then directly added to a coffee/spice grinder.







The Brisket was trimmed of a lot of fat(optional) as I wanted the rub to penetrate closer to the meat. I then added the following for the rub. Granulated Onion & Garlic, Chili(ancho pasilla), brown sugar, Chili(new mexico), fresh ground pepper, allspice, kona coffee, thyme, etc. Lightly salted with Kosher salt before adding rub.


I'm updating as the cook progresses so thats what I have thus far. The WSM is cruising along at 345° for a high heat cook and I'm enjoying my first beer and trying out my new remote Thermometer.

update - 1:50pm - peeked in on Brisket and its looking good and smells great, smoker running 345ish and the Brisket is at 150






Update 2:30pm - removed brisket from smoker, was around 160° and after foiling returned to smoker for finishing. Good color, burnt end was tasty, when sliced it'll be good to see if it needs anything additional (rub was a low salt version)










Updated 5pmish - Wind picked up last few hours and the charcoal is running low so I just let it slowly do it's thing. Smoker temperature steadily lowered and temps around 250° before brisket was removed. It's still resting but I took a small piece to appease the cook before the feast




Update: sliced after resting-
nice color inside, the flat was easy to slice as it was a little firmer than the point.  The point was very tender and moist with great flavor due to the additional fat in the area. Mostly eating the brisket as is and using the additional Red No. 5 sauce every so often. Here are the updated pics after slicing



 
Brisket flat









BBQ links to forums and helpful information



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Friday, July 24, 2009

WSM Smoker Bacon Wrapped Pork Loin Stuffed and Peppers

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Another Pork loin stuffed and smoked on the Weber Smokey Mountain smoker. This was a request from a family member for our vacation up to Lake Tahoe, California. The plan was to roll slice the Pork loin and add similar stuffing ingredients as I've done before except that I will add a Bacon wrap around the Garlic/Spinach/Mushroom to give it additional flavor. I also added fresh Sourdough bread(should've toasted) in place of using croutons or bread crumb stuffing. Here are a few pics of the BBQ which turned out great.
(previous stuffed loin cooks with similar ingredients and pics here, and  here )


PhotobucketApple Cran


The meal was cooked the day before then I used my Foodsaver vacuum sealer to seal the whole meal and place in the fridge. I followed other cooks advice who use a pot full of boiling water to reheat the meal directly in the package to ensure moistness. It was the first time I reheated in this fashion as I usually will use the oven or for smaller portions the all familiar Microwave. The ABT's (stuffed jalapeños) have to be reheated in the oven to obtain the crisp bacon and allowing the firmness of the pepper to retain.


apple cran(top) bacon wrapped garlic spinach mushroom(bottom)added to wsm
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Monday, June 15, 2009

WSM: Pork Loin Stuffed - Garlic Mushroom and Apple Cranberry

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Here are the pics from the weekend using the WSM (Weber Smokey Mountain) smoker. I bought a 10.14lb Pork Loin that I sliced in half and then roll sliced the two pieces for 2 different stuffings.




Pork Loin Stuffings

1. Freshly minced garlic 1 bulb, 10oz sliced mushrooms, red onions, spinach, salt pepper and some bbq rub, into skillet for just about 5 mins to meld the flavors, added a little white wine and then a package of Corn Bread stuffing mix, mixed and set aside.


2. Granny Smith apples, Cranberries(ocean spray sweetened cranberries in bag) about 1 handful, red onion, Orange rind and juice and half orange added, fresh ground pepper and salt and added to skillet for 5mins approx and a little cornbread stuffing mix that was left over.





Loin Prep / Pre Smoke

After roll slicing the 2 pork loins I salt and peppered the inside and added stuffing, rolled the stuffing, and then used 100% cotton butcher twine to tie and secure, salt pepper the outside on each. I added just a dusting of bbq spice on the Mushroom Garlic.

WSM Smoking

Used the middle grate for the Pork Loins and the empty, foiled water pan, it was around 320° when I added the loins. I had Apricot wood chunks and a chunk of Hickory for this cook.

About 25mins later I finished preparing the ABT (stuffed Jalapenos) and I added those to the upper grate. (creams cheese, red onion, bbq spice rub, covered in bacon)

Into the cook about 1.5 hours I added my first glaze to the Apple Cran loin. The glaze was heated in a saucepan till bubbling and consisted of Blackberry preserves and lemon juice. I applied the second time about 15mins before removing the loins. The Garlic Mushroom was not touched once it was on the WSM, but they both received drippings from the ABT's above, heavenly bacon drippings!

Finished

Abt's were on for approx 1h45mins and then off
Pork Loin had about a 2h45min cook to 160° internal temp. The WSM went from 320­° - 280° throughout the cook.








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Thursday, June 11, 2009

WSM - Another Smoked Stuffed Pork Loin

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Purchased a nice size Pork Loin that I am going to smoke on Friday evening. I liked the previous stuffed Pork loins that I did in the past and I will repeat certain aspects and document them here. This Pork loin, like the others, came in a cryovac pack and is rather large. I like to slice them directly in half and then roll-slice/cut each of them to about 1 " thickness. This allows them to be stuffed with two different ingredients and allows more space for the stuffing had I just slice down in the middle as you would for a butterfly cut.

Choices on stuffing

I like to add two different type of stuffings for variety and have found that guests enjoy tasting both as well. An apple cranberry with a fruit glaze is always popular and goes fantastic with the pork. The glaze on this can range from orange juice or other fruit juice with a little sugar or an easy glaze by using various jam or preserves heated in a saucepan. Applied near the end of the cook or throughout to layer the flavors. I have no set plans, as you can't really go wrong with this one. I also like to add either breadcrumbs or croutons to add to the body of the stuffing. It allows it all to come together nicely and the stuffing will hold together easier.



Another stuffing that I experimented with was a mushroom garlic onion spinach mix. Add fresh mushrooms and garlic and other ingredients in a skillet and eliminating some of the extra moisture. Again adding bread crumbs or croutons and your choice of spices. With this stuffing, it greatly improves when adding a creamy finishing sauce. I tried a little alfredo sauce on top of finished slices and it turned out great. I'm curious to see what other finishing sauces might pair well with this and I might delve into the tomato based ones this time. We shall see and I'll update the topic with pics and thoughts once I finish the cook tomorrow.

Any thoughts or experiences?

Here is one the cooks I did in the past using the Weber Smokey Mountain:



Image

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Sunday, June 7, 2009

WSM Smoker Weekend: Roaster Chicken, Sausage Fattie and ABT's

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Skinless trial Roaster Chicken


Fired up the WSM(Weber Smokey Mountain) again this weekend and grabbed three Roaster Chickens from the store along with a roll of Jimmy Dean sage sausage and 15 fresh Jalapeños and a 1lb of bacon. I changed my normal process with the Roaster Chickens a little. I butterflied the Chicken as normal, removing the backbone and cutting to make two equal halves. This time I removed the majority of the skin, mostly the breast and thigh areas. I was attempting to see how the rub and marinade would cover the chicken in a more direct way to the meat instead of the skin. After skinning and washing the chicken I applied my rub. Two different ones, but they both contained the usual Salt Pepper, garlic, sugar. I went with a soy marinade with a little white vinegar and a little more sugar(white,turbinado. The second was a beer and fresh rosemary mix that would sit for a couple hours.

continued..................


The smoker was fired up with Kingsford briquets and since we have an abundant source of orchard smoke wood here in California I went and got a 4-fist size piece of Apricot. The smoker was reaching 350º+ with the waterpan in place but empty and foiled, I wanted a higher smoke temp for the chicken/sausage/abt's. Chicken was added shortly after.

  The Sausage Fattie was next and I stuffed with a mixture of onion, mushroom, salt, pepper, Parmesan and rolled it all together on placed on the top grill with some of the other chicken. Everything was pulled in about 1.5 - 2hours and I then had room to put the Jalapeño peppers on. The ABT peppers where relatively mild and the easiest way for me to determine this is when I'm slicing the hotter Jalapeno peppers usually send their fumes into my eyes and nostrils. I could tell the somewhat larger peppers wouldn't be as hot as others in the past. I still de-seeded and de-veined the peppers and stuffed with cream cheese and BBQ rub and wrapped the halved peppers with 1/2 slice of bacon for every half pepper. In order to get the remaining coals working I propped the lid on the WSM a little in hope to achieve hotter grill temperature which was beneath 300º. 45-60mins later I everything was ready for the meal.


My thoughts on the skinless chicken was that the outer meat was drier based on not having the skin and accompanying fat layer. It did however take on more of the rub and marinade taste into the meat as expected. With chicken that is skinless a higher temp, faster cook, for smoking would of had less dry outside meat but it was delicious, and once past the outside layer the whole chicken was very moist as usual. So between the 2 different rubs and marinade chicken the beer rosemary was ok, the soy, vinegar, garlic taste was very good. The saltiness of the soy/vinegar allowed it to penetrate more through the chicken as is usual. Keep the beer marinade for marinating the cooks, the chicken with the rosemary would of been better without it. The fattie was just ok, have had a lot better, the abt's always a hit, and these were VERY mild and had no surprises with very hot ones. All the peppers were extremely mild due to the batch and longer cook time, they were like popping candy.

I still prefer the SKIN ON -  Roaster Chicken that I usually cook like this previous Cook log




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Sunday, May 17, 2009

WSM Smoked Pork Spare Ribs and ABT's

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Passed by the local supermarket to see what they were offering for my next meal on the Weber Smokey Mountain cooker. I was mainly looking for something either in a Brisket, Pork Butt, Pork Ribs. They had a great selection and figured a shorter 4-5 hour cook was what I was in the mood for with some good ole' spare ribs and Jalapeño stuffed peppers aka ABT's. I paid ($1.78lb / 12.53lbs / $22.30) for a cryovac of Spare Ribs.


Once the Pork Spare ribs were home, I removed them from the cryovac package and thoroughly washed them in the sink. Some people do not bother washing their ribs but this is a step I always take with all my poultry and pork. I laid the ribs on my larger cutting board and using a sharp boning knife I cut them St. Louis style, again just my habits as they will work just fine directly on the smoker without trimming. I mixed some fresh rub, limiting some of the chili quantity this time as the chili became bitter last time when I applied a little too much. Also added salt, pepper, kosher salt, garlic, cumin, sugar both brown and turbinado, cayenne pepper, onion powder etc.

The ribs, now rubbed were sitting for a 45min's while I got to the smoker ready. I added a full water pan and plenty of smoke wood from our local orchards. This time a mix between Cherry and Apricot,
and since I had plenty and it was a mild wood I thought I would add more wood chunks than usual to test the smokiness and just how well the ribs accepted it. The Weber Smokey Mountain smoker was at an easy 300° pretty quickly in our 90° weather. I then added a rib rack(upside down turkey roaster rack) and added the ribs to the middle section of the smoker, just above the filled water pan. The trimmed pieces filled the upper grate. The spares and the trimmed cuts where cooking at 230-250° highest was 280° or so thru my Tel-tru thermometer in the lid. The whole meal was about a 4.5 hours cook time, including taking them off for a quick BBQ sauce glaze and returning to smoker, the trimmings came off earlier as "chef treats".


Off the smoker, with just a little bbq sauce glaze that was added 10mins before, additional sauce(s) served on the side










The ABT's went on the upper grate as soon as the ribs and trimmings were removed, this was kind of backwards having the appetizers last but I was more interested in eating ribs then the Jalapenos.

The ribs turned out great and were extremely tender with a nice blend of spices and sweetness from the glaze. Another easy and fantastic cook from the WSM, and god bless the pig for all it's tastiness.

Here are a few other pics of the cook.























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Sunday, November 23, 2008

Thanksgiving Smoker WSM: The Super Cub... Carcass and Carnage

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Happy Thanksgiving!
So the Weber Smokey Mountain cooker turned out some great Thanksgiving day turkeys. I had (2) 15lb turkeys and used an Garlic oil, dark ale, cayenne injection and stuffed another with apple and fresh rosemary sprigs. They were on the WSM for 4hrs and the 2nd one off at 5hours. Pics were taken as soon as the Turkeys were taken off the smoker and placed in a pan to rest. I missed taking pics of the full table spread but it was fantastic and PLENTIFUL. Many left with a lot of leftovers that come in so handy later in the evening and especially the next day.

Injection Turkey

Rosemary apple

The turkeys were extremely moist and had reached 175º in the breast which was higher than I originally wanted to reach. The Rosemary Turkey stayed on longer since it was on the lower grate and I wrapped in foil to try to retain moisture and have it pull a little.

SUPER CUB

Later in the day I had family try one of my RC planes, the Super Cub. It's the easiest to fly and with the new Lipos can approach 20mins flying time. First beginner pilot went fine and performed a few loops without difficulty. The second beginner pilot performed a inside loop then immediately followed with an outside loop. THE WING FOLDED. Even though I had support tape and the struts on, the outside loop put pressure on the wing area that wasn't protected. I have his support for the parts needed and I'm guilty for allowing him to stunt fly the plane on his very first flight but I had no idea that he would attempt aerobatics =). So on Thanksgiving add that to my list of what I'm thankful for.... not allowing them to fly the Parkzone F4U Corsair I just purchased.

Super Cub aftermath



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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Thanksgiving Meal Prep: Using The WSM Smoker

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Virtualweberbullet.com


I'm in the process of preparing the meal layout for Thanksgiving and I will be using my WSM- Weber Smokey Mountain Cooker. I plan on using the smoker to cook (2) turkeys in the WSM and perhaps another additional in the oven. We have several fruit orchards nearby and now is the season that they cut and burn a lot of their trimmed trees. I have A LOT of Apricot and Cherry wood that I was given so I plan on using that for my smoke wood.

The virtualweberbullet.com site has been a source of great advice, answers, and a ton of pics that help the owner of the Weber Smokey Mountain cooker and BBQ enthusiast alike. I have noticed quite a lot of traffic to my posts regarding the cooks I've done with the WSM and wanted to point out that the above site has opened their specific Thanksgiving TURKEY related section. All BBQ enthusiasts are welcome! I'll be adding my pics of the two turkeys later this weekend. It can't be any easier to smoke the birds with the WSM. You basically add your charcoal or lump with your choice of smoking wood (apple, apricot, cherry, hickory, etc) then depending on your desire for a slow cook at 240º-260º or you can go much higher like 350º+ and with a probe thermometer you have an excellent turkey in approx 2.5 - 5hours that will rival any Turkey you've eaten. You can get as fancy or as simple as you'd like with brining and injection but it's not necessary. Take a look at the virtualweberbullet.com site for pics of some fantastic Thanksgiving Turkeys.

I'll post my BBQ later in the weekend!

Here are some of my previous cooks using the WSM - weber smokey mountain cooker


Happy Thanksgiving from our family to yours!


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Saturday, July 12, 2008

Summertime and BBQ Smoking !

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It's been awhile since I have accessed my site so I think I'll keep it simple and add some quick pics. I have been using my new smoker quite a bit. Some of the great meals so far include several types of whole, halved, quartered chicken. Salmon a couple times with different brines and seasoning. A lot of baby back pork ribs done various ways. And pork butt which requires the longest cook times but wow what a pay off. Also several appetizers including stuffed peppers, shrimp etc. Here are a few recent cooks:

*additional BBQ Smoker pictures are posted here




We're currently getting plenty of smoke in the air in California this summer due to the 20+ wildfires. I'd much rather breathe the smoky goodness that comes from these cooks!


Pork Baby Back Ribs - 3 Racks / Sausage Fattie



Pork Butt AKA Boston Butt - Pork Shoulder



(1) Butt after being pulled

Weber Smoky Mountain AKA WSM or Weber Bullet




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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Spareribs - Smoked St. Louis Style and ABT's

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Again using the Weber Smokey Mountain cooker aka WSM. Full chimney of charcoal and fist size chunks of Hickory wood and a handful of apple during cook.

Three nice racks of Pork Spareribs, I then trimmed St. Louis style. Dry ribs with various homemade rub, sauce on the side for those who like 'em wet. I prefer BOTH!

Ribs and stuffed Jalapeños and Anaheim peppers cream cheese w/rub mixed and bacon wrapped.

*additional BBQ Smoker pictures are posted here

Trimming and easy prep for St. Louis style ribs










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Stuffed Pork Loin

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Roll sliced or Roll cut the Pork loin and added 2 types of stuffing.

First stuffing= was a cran-raspberry, Granny smith apples(peeled,diced) red onion, seasoned croutons, apple juice, S&P with glaze of blackberry jam, OJ concentrate, Brown Sugar more apple juice and S&P.

Second stuffing= Mushrooms, red onion, minced garlic, fresh rosemary, seasoned croutons(this time crumbled), S&P, garlic powder.

And here is the rest of it.











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Roaster Chicken and Turkey breast

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Whole roaster chicken that was butterflied then halved. Marinated in the "roadside chicken" recipe that contains a lot of apple vinegar, salt pepper, garlic, citrus, Worcestershire, and brown sugar. I think the the Turkey breast was just rubbed with some homemade version. It came out juicy even though the bottom pics appear dry. I will certainly have to put a whole turkey(s) in next time for a longer cook. Look out Turkeys, Thanksgiving is right around the corner!















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BBQ - Pork Butt pulled pork overnighter

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14+ hour overnighter Pork Butt aka Boston Butt or Pork Shoulder.

This was a full overnight cook that took well over 14 hours at 225º. They're 2 Boston Butts-bone in AKA Pork Shoulder that I rubbed with 2 batches of rub that I put together. There was a lot of chili powder in each as well as the usual black pepper, garlic, cumin, onion, garlic, cayenne, brown sugar, salt, cinnamon, all spice etc. One of the best overnight cooks so far as the pulled pork was delicious and made excellent leftovers in sandwiches and tacos with cilantro and salsa verde mmmm.

Couple of BBQ related sites with great posts and content

1.) The Virtual Weber Bullet (Weber Smoky Mountain cooker)
a.) discussion forum
b.) cooking topics

2.) BBQ brethren forums






















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Pics

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This page is a little unorganized with all the volume and different type of pics that I have added.
The easist way to find what you are looking for would be the google search box listed on my site

  AND/OR

Clicking on specific labels to see my pics - such as my BBQ tag page or my RC tag page

I hope to organize this a little better soon sorry for the mess




1.) Pork Butt overnighter 14+ hour cook BBQ -




2.) Summertime Baby back ribs and Sausage fatties plus high heat Pork Butt




3.) Roaster chicken and Turkey breast




4.) Stuffed Pork Loin




5.) Pork Spareribs and ABT's

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Monday, March 31, 2008

Jasonweb.net - a Smoke ring Member

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