Cooking ribs with Kingsford Competition Briquets


 

Chris Allingham

Administrator
Staff member
I'm cooking 3 slabs of Costco baby backs ribs this afternoon using Kingsford Competition Briquets. Cut into halves, sprinkled with Gates Original Recipe rub, and put into a rib rack.

Lit 30 briquettes Minion Method. I usually use a Weber Firestarter cube but wanted to eliminate that as a source of smell during the lighting process, so I just tore off the top part of the charcoal bag and used that to light the coals.

As with the burn comparison I did recently, the Competition Briquets light without the usual "blue bag" Kingsford smell. The 30 briquettes were ready to go in 10 minutes tops.

Poured about 1/2 chamber full of briquettes into the cooker, spread the hot coals on top, added some small, dry apple wood chunks to the coals, some hot water to the pan, put the ribs on the top cooking grate, and started cooking.

I'm about 70 minutes in, and the cooker is chugging along nicely at about 240*F with top vent wide open and with all 3 bottoms vents about half open.

This is my second time cooking ribs with Competition Briquets. The first time was on Jan. 2 when I cooked with the Kingsford guys at the Clorox Technical Center. One difference that day was that it rained and was a bit breezy, so we had to run the vents more open to keep the temp up. Today it's clear and calm and the air temp in about 60*F, so it's perfect cooking weather.

Another difference from Jan. 2 is that I had a hard time evaluating the smell of the product lighting that day because no matter where I stood around the cooker, the smoke followed me and I kept getting a full-on "smoke facial", which really ruined my nose. I am having a better experience today
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and don't notice any of the characteristic K smell when lighting.

Chris
 
...ribs this afternoon using Kingsford Competition Briquets. Cut into halves, sprinkled with Gates Original Recipe rub, and put into a rib rack.

you cut your briquets in half and sprinkled w/ rub? I bet they didnt smell like K
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let us know how the ribs are and how you like the fuel, i'll check tomarrow. hows stability? thanks.
 
Sorry, Bill, I intentionally decided to not take photos, but to just enjoy the cooking process instead. One of my tendencies is to try to turn every cook into something I can feature on the website, and that can take the fun out of it for me. In 2009, I have resolved to do more cooking just for me, just for fun, without photographing, and using store-bought rubs and sauces to make it quick and easy. So today was my first of hopefully many such cooks in 2009.
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I cooked the ribs for 4 hours, then sauced twice at 10 minute intervals at the end. Very pleased with the results.

Had no difficulty controlling the cooker temp. It ran 230-240*F with the bottom vents about half open. No big spikes, no big drops in temp. When I removed the lid to sauce the ribs, the fire came to life and jumped up to 260*F, so there was still some fuel left after 4 hours. It will be interesting to see what, if anything, is left after it cools off and I can sift the leftover charcoal from the briquettes.

Shawn, I am using the 18" as I'm only cooking 3 slabs of ribs.

Dan, don't knock it until you've tried it.
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Regards,
Chris
 
Originally posted by Phil Perrin:
When did you say the new briquets will be available?
I am told they are shipping to stores now. Keep an eye open at Home Depot and warehouse stores like Costco. My experience with Costco is that briquettes usually start showing up in late February or early March.

Chris
 
Originally posted by Chris Allingham:
Sorry, Bill, I intentionally decided to not take photos, but to just enjoy the cooking process instead. One of my tendencies is to try to turn every cook into something I can feature on the website, and that can take the fun out of it for me. In 2009, I have resolved to do more cooking just for me, just for fun, without photographing, and using store-bought rubs and sauces to make it quick and easy. So today was my first of hopefully many such cooks in 2009.
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Chris
Can't blame you there.
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Thanks for the report.

Bill
 
I'll be looking for them for sure. Thanks for the info Chris. Let us know how much fuel is left. I'm hoping they aren't more crumbly or delicate.
 
Chris, I apologize if this has already been covered. So are these briquets similar to Rancher?
 
Chris Lilly is shrinking big time. He was fit looking before, now he almost looks ill.

Chris thanks for the comparison.
 
Originally posted by Chris Allingham:
Sorry, Bill, I intentionally decided to not take photos, but to just enjoy the cooking process instead. One of my tendencies is to try to turn every cook into something I can feature on the website, and that can take the fun out of it for me. In 2009, I have resolved to do more cooking just for me, just for fun, without photographing, and using store-bought rubs and sauces to make it quick and easy. So today was my first of hopefully many such cooks in 2009.
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Regards,
Chris

Good for you Chris. Sounds like a great idea. Sometimes we can get caught up in this and forget to have fun.

Also, how was the ash when you lifted the lid. Notice anything out of the ordinary?
 
Originally posted by Tom Chips:
I'll be looking for them for sure. Thanks for the info Chris. Let us know how much fuel is left. I'm hoping they aren't more crumbly or delicate.
When I sifted out the ashes, the bottom of the charcoal chamber was covered with a single layer of briquettes, each with about 1/3 to 1/2 left to burn. So not a ton of leftover fuel. Some of the pieces were big enough that some of you would want to save them and reuse next time. They were sturdy enough that they could be reused, if desired.

Chris
 
Originally posted by LarryR:
So are these briquets similar to Rancher?
They are basically just wood char and binder, so I guess that makes them similar to Rancher, except that Rancher was ridiculously inexpensive. Kingsford Competition Briquets will cost a bit more than blue bag K.

Chris
 

 

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