I went with the Royal Oak lump this time which had some pieces the size of my foot. More on that later.
It may not be visible in this picture, but they also mistook the smoke ring for a bloody undercooked chicken. I could not catch a break. In any event I enjoyed a drumstick and added one more factoid to my arsenal- to always use the Minion method when cooking with lump.
Here is the bird prior to cooking.
Nothing but the best for my friends and family.This can soon went where the sun doesn't shine.I had to scrub up before manhandling this poor thing
Nothing but the best for my friends and family.This can soon went where the sun doesn't shine.I had to scrub up before manhandling this poor thing
Here we are about halfway through, so far so good. From here on things got a little hairy.
After some time, the temperature took a nosedive in the area of 200 degrees with the vents wide open and the bird nowhere near done. I tried throwing in some hickory chunks to spike the temperature up to no avail, though it produced plenty of smoke. At that point I started up another chimney and added it lump by lump with tongs through the door 15 minutes later, only to have it dive down again after another hour! By then I was glad I had a few spare PBRs around. I eventually had an epiphany and added some straight from the bag to the fire chamber, in a crude but effective version of the Minion method (for information on that click here). The short explanation is I used a mixture of lit and unlit charcoal to extend the life of the fire and provide even heat than one lit batch would alone. I can only recommend this with lump or other charcoal advertised as 'natural' like Stubb's and Kingsford Competition, and not with traditional charcoal like Kingsford's standard variety, as it will send chemical vapors through your food.
After some time the natives were getting restless. In addition to my wife, I had her cousins over, and I found out the hard way you don't make two hungry Chinese pregnant girls wait for a meal. I caused some consternation by pulling the bird off the can at 170 in the dark meat which I saw on a recipe on TheVirtualWeberBullet.com, and found out that popular opinion dictates I should have waited until 180.
It may not be visible in this picture, but they also mistook the smoke ring for a bloody undercooked chicken. I could not catch a break. In any event I enjoyed a drumstick and added one more factoid to my arsenal- to always use the Minion method when cooking with lump.
Cheers-
-Rene
2 comments:
When there is plenty of fuel and you had the heat to begin with, a temp drop would make me think there was an airflow problem. At least on the Egg it would. Are there any holes on the WSM that can get clogged with ash during a cook? Just a guess, I haven't used a WSM.
Hi Chris, thanks for commenting.
Is that an issue with the egg? I havnt gotten my hands on one yet. When I started I cleaned out the old ashes, and used Royal Oaks lump, which doesn't make as much ash as other things, but next time I cook I'll look out for that.
Cheers-
Rene
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