Dear Everyone - it's me, Laura. I have been searching the forum and the internet and I have several questions about temp control on my 22.5 OTG.
#1 is I'm on a Chris Lilly kick and I'm going to try his loaf pan chicken tomorrow. I'm going to build a fire on one side of the grill and cook the chicken for 2ish hours. The temp he says to get at is 300 degrees. I was thinking of 20 unlit briquettes, some apple wood chunks, and then place 12 lit briquettes (Stubb's!) on top. Empty drip pan underneath the loaf pan chicken just in case. Keep vents open and adjust when it starts to climb towards 300. Sound good? Any other ways you like better?
#2 I'm going to do ribs again this weekend - might do a Chris Lilly recipe or a Harry Soo! Either way I'm completely excited, ribs twice in one week! I am interested in doing a higher temp than what I did the ribs last Sunday - 200-225 on the Smokenator is what I did, and it was delicious. I want to either get up to 250 or 275 depending on the rib recipe I choose (I'm guessing the Smokenator doesn't run that hot but I'm going to pop over to that forum and ask them). I'm guessing maybe 40 unlit briquettes on one side of the grill, hickory wood chunks, 12-16 lit briquettes, empty drip pan.
Most of my indirect has been putting the briquettes in baskets on either side of a pan, it is new to me to do the two zone fire but I like it and want to get the hang of it.
#3 is a Smokenator question, in case anyone has one and has an interest in answering - in the directions it says that 250 degrees is too hot for the Smokenator, but does it run at temps 250-300? When I tried (and I didn't try very hard) I kept it around 225 and was delighted that it could do that for 6 hours with barely any bothering. Love it! I'm interested in using it for these cooks and also won't bother if won't get that hot.
Thank you - hope you are all eating delicious food -
Laura
#1 is I'm on a Chris Lilly kick and I'm going to try his loaf pan chicken tomorrow. I'm going to build a fire on one side of the grill and cook the chicken for 2ish hours. The temp he says to get at is 300 degrees. I was thinking of 20 unlit briquettes, some apple wood chunks, and then place 12 lit briquettes (Stubb's!) on top. Empty drip pan underneath the loaf pan chicken just in case. Keep vents open and adjust when it starts to climb towards 300. Sound good? Any other ways you like better?
#2 I'm going to do ribs again this weekend - might do a Chris Lilly recipe or a Harry Soo! Either way I'm completely excited, ribs twice in one week! I am interested in doing a higher temp than what I did the ribs last Sunday - 200-225 on the Smokenator is what I did, and it was delicious. I want to either get up to 250 or 275 depending on the rib recipe I choose (I'm guessing the Smokenator doesn't run that hot but I'm going to pop over to that forum and ask them). I'm guessing maybe 40 unlit briquettes on one side of the grill, hickory wood chunks, 12-16 lit briquettes, empty drip pan.
Most of my indirect has been putting the briquettes in baskets on either side of a pan, it is new to me to do the two zone fire but I like it and want to get the hang of it.
#3 is a Smokenator question, in case anyone has one and has an interest in answering - in the directions it says that 250 degrees is too hot for the Smokenator, but does it run at temps 250-300? When I tried (and I didn't try very hard) I kept it around 225 and was delighted that it could do that for 6 hours with barely any bothering. Love it! I'm interested in using it for these cooks and also won't bother if won't get that hot.
Thank you - hope you are all eating delicious food -
Laura