An Old Country Pecos from Academy is a good deal as long as it has a decent build. If you’re patient, though, you might find a decent offset used like I did. I actually sold both my WSM 18 and 22 for the flavor I get from my offset. I also sold a vertical offset smoker I had because it didn’t give me that horizontal offset smoke flavor.
Anyhow, I found another latest model 18” WSM recently for $50 and I couldn’t resist. I figured the guy had bought a pellet grill but he replaced his WSM with a Masterbuilt electric smoker. I kid you not.
So last weekend I put more pork butts than I ever have in either of my current smokers. (My previous record on my old 18” WSM was 5 pork butts start to finish on that pit alone, and it took 18 hrs if I remember correctly.) Saturday it took 15 hrs to smoke these 8 to 9 lb pork butts, with 7 hrs in my offset, and 8 to finish in my WSM (three on each grate “tripod-ed” on end.) I used my BBQ GURU first gen PartyQ with water (in a deep disposable foil pan sitting in OE water pan) over lump and a bottom layer of briquettes from my last bag of Weber charcoal.
As it primarily relates to my WSM, LESSONS LEARNED and REMINDERS RE-learned:
5 butts tops from now on in either pit. While 6 butts don’t necessarily impede air flow too much in my WSM like in my backyard offset, I can’t rotate the bottom grate around to check tenderness without fear of knocking the pork butt tripod down.
Ramping up the temp too much in a severely packed WSM will overcook the bark in places, water in the pan or not, mostly on meat on the bottom grate.
Nothing beats the texture of 225-235*-ish smoked pork butts, and the WSM is hard to beat....well, I never forgot that. I just missed it.
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