Dale Perry
TVWBB Guru
I got a thermapen mainly because of chicken and the speed it has for competition. My chicken gets us calls often and none of my bbq is sweet. Kevin, lets be fair not all of us cook sweet bbq.

this isn't really hard ... because pink or red juice is not palatable where poultry is concerned, to most people .. irrespective of safety (yes, I've red the bloody chicken article and I understand it can be safe)Originally posted by K Kruger:
And why would you test the juices for palatability? The presence of pink juices, e.g., does not denote unsafe chicken, nor does the lack necessarily mean the chicken is safe. So it doesn't work for safety. Once the chicken is (properly) determined to be safe then palatibility is in the mouth of the beholder. Using a napkin to test palatability is illogical.
Yes, gotcha. Av semantic difference. In my view a visual cue has nothing to do with palatability. It may lead you to taste the food in question --which would then let you know its palatability-- but were you do choose, based on this cue, not to taste the item, then palatability would be left undetermined. In other words, it's a tactile thing, not a mental thing. Regardless, I do take issue with KCBS teaching this sort of thing --if in fact it is standard-- as meaningful, unless it is being taught as merely a visual requirement with nothing to do with safety. But (as I have written numerous times elsewhere) I take issue with much of what KCBS does and doesn't do. Developing and teaching relevent judging criteria has never been their strong suit.this isn't really hard ... because pink or red juice is not palatable where poultry is concerned,
No, no, no. If I thought the comps were silly I would never have taken the time to help those I have helped work on their comp skills and techniques. Though I think KCBS is pretty clueless when it comes to rules and, especially, judging criteria, and though I think it would benefit them (and the competitors) immensely were the focus on meaningful results (a pink napkin might = yuck but a white one ? 'done' necessarily), I do not think comps are silly at all. Quite the opposite. Were KCBS to adopt meaningful safety criteria and, especially, meaningful judging criteria they could in fact elevate their comps to the level of seriousness most competitors already view them. The time, effort and money that competitors put into comps absolutely screams seriousness. KCBS does their competitors a disservice, imo, by sticking with their laissez-faire approach and, in the world of food and cooking comps, relegates their comps to a much lower status than they should be.it is obvious that you think that KCBS comps are silly but to me it is a great and fun hobby.