Sameer Wahid
TVWBB Member
I recently smoked a 10 lb pork butt on my 22.5 kettle (with a smokenator, using maple leaf briquettes). I had to open the kettle about 10-12 times during the cook (between refilling the water pan, spraying AJ/maple syrup on the butt, adding more coals to the smokenator, and smoking a chicken at the same time). The total time was 17 hours. My grill temp (not dome) was about 220 on average, but here's the most curious point - 4 hours into the cook the meat 147F, it stayed at 147F for about SIX hours, and then took another 4 hours to slowly climb to 165 (after which I foiled it for three hours to hit 190).
The meat tasted good, if not a touch dry.
I had a few questions on my mind:
Is that normal to have such a long "plateau"?
Would a larger water pan, placed on the charcoal grate, help or hurt? (thinking I could open the lid less if I didn't have to worry about the water pan)
Thanks!
Sameer
The meat tasted good, if not a touch dry.
I had a few questions on my mind:
Is that normal to have such a long "plateau"?
Would a larger water pan, placed on the charcoal grate, help or hurt? (thinking I could open the lid less if I didn't have to worry about the water pan)
Thanks!
Sameer