j biesinger
TVWBB Platinum Member
Personally it does not bother me if someone does not always accurately articulate their techniques and reasoning.
they why bother writing a book?
Personally it does not bother me if someone does not always accurately articulate their techniques and reasoning.
Originally posted by Bob Haskins:
Personally it does not bother me if someone does not always accurately articulate their techniques and reasoning.
Originally posted by Bob Haskins:
From what I have heard and read I think most of these guys tend to over simplify the process not over complicate.
There are many great chefs in this world who have no idea what's happening once they turn ont the heat but they get great results nontheless.
Personally it does not bother me if someone does not always accurately articulate their techniques and reasoning.
We're all big boys here, no one needs the Q police to nurse maid us.
the problem is that he recommends mopping/basting when the ribs are sweating. I suppose one could interpret it to mean: therefore the flavor will be absorbed directly after sweating, but that's never explained.
Well ribs might "sweat" when the animal is alive but I doubt dead ribs do. Big Grin
In order to regulate internal body temperature, the sweat mechanism allows an animal to quickly dissapate heat. Animals like a horse, cow or human will sweat with exercise or in hot temperatures. Reptiles & insects don't sweat as their body temperature is governed by the environmental temperature. Pigs on the other hand, are mammals and need to have water/humidity applied to the skin inorder to help dissapate heat. This is the reason pigs are associated with wallowing in the mud.
I believe that's what he means. I was looking around on the smokingmeat forums a while back and ran across a few posts by a guy who said he had a conversation with Mike Mills about his entire rib cooking process. He said Mills told him that misting with apple juice and adding magic dust during the "sweat" will allow those flavors to be absorbed back into the meat after the sweat. The guy tried cooking Mills' way and seemed to agree with the techniques. I'm not sure how much of that is true though. I met Mike Mills briefly at the Best in the West rib cookoff this September but didn't talk to him about cooking. The ribs from his booth were pretty good though.
Sorry about this.I think this is a dead thread, but if meat doesn't absorb or is penetrated by flavour during the cooking process how do you explain a smoke ring or smoke flavour penetrating the meat? Fundamentally isn't that what BBQ is all about?
quote:
We generally accept that spice flavors can be pulled into meat right?
Um, no we don't. Not if you're talking rubbing ahead of time, or just rubbing in general. What flavors might get 'pulled' into meat are fairly immaterial. Now, flavor-brining, that's a different scenario. But it takes time to be very effective.
What people say about ground meat, etc., I'm not concerned with. People say a lot of things, Jerry's point for this thread in the first place.
Sure, it's due to surface area. Smoke flavor is made up of hundreds of different chemical combinations and particulates. Volatilization of smoke along with tiny particulates carry the smoke hither and yon and it sticks to various things (including inside your nose, which is why many Qers talk about the differences between smoking then eating the meat immediately vs. eating it the next day, when smoke has been more removed from the body, clothing, etc.). The aroma (or odor, as the case may be) is so permeating that concentration and source are virtually indistinguishable to the human nose. And smoke concentrated on a surface of food makes in impossible to tell that it's only on the food's surface. Smoke aroma/odor continues to volatilize for some time.
That the smoke seems to be right in the meat/cheese/whatever doesn't mean it is. Again, given enough time - plenty of time - and given the necessary porosity, and given the needed more closed environment, it's possible that some elements of smoke penetrate meat. But we generally do not smoke very long (even butts) and the environmental conditions do not support claims of 'penetration'. It's possible that traces of this and that in smoke might get pulled into the meat during the post-cook resting/cooling phase, but this would be fairly negligible and in no way near the elements on the surface and those that volatilize in the air.
Kevin
Originally posted by Bob Sample:
....HH or low and slow are just 2 methods to achieve the same result- good food, good friends and good times.
Think I'll fire up the Q,throw on some meat, grab a beer, pull up my barber chair, lie back, listen to some music and watch those little wisps of MAGIC gently float from the vent on my lid.
Originally posted by Jim Lampe:
I never sweat when making ribs....
my mouth waters though....![]()
but can someone explain to me why a flavor brine will get into the meat, but a marinade won't?
I was under the impression that once a dry rub made the meat sweat it was then marinading w/ the meat. Some folks even use acidic components in their rub, right? Well, Kevin K. made the point that any spice flavors that made it into meat from rubs were "pretty immaterial", but that flavor brines were a different story, so I was just wondering what made a brine so special.