Russ Turner
TVWBB Member
My first post, sorry if I screw this up or if its too long... I have the smaller bullet for 1 yr, smoked several times, mixed results.
Here is a problem that I had on Sunday and seen last smoke about 2 wks ago.
Smoker Prep: One charcoal starter full of plain kingsford with 3 pieces of dry mesquite on top (3 inch diameter, 4 inches long, bark on). I let it burn until the mesquite breaks apart and hardly smokes....kingsford is half the original size by then.
I put the kingsford on the grate, add about double amount on top of new, not started briquettes, put mesquited embers on top of that. New briquettes are smoking like crazy.
I put a 3 pound pork tenderloin on the bottom rack, fat down, and 7 pound brisket (flat only) fat down on the top rack (both were cryovac, not frozen at the time, warm rinse, rubbed with mustard, dusting of Lowry's seasoned salt, covered with brown sugar)
Temp outside is mid 40's.
Temp rises gradually and in about an hour I'm at 200-225 where I stay.
At 3 hours I open the top for the first time. I had a wired temp probe in the tenderloin and it says 175, so I take the tenderloin out. It looks very nice...(gave to my daughter, will get a report on taste tomorrow).
I decide to put bbq sauce on the brisket when I put the top rack back on. I notice that the brisket is covered with a brownish grayish wet spotty coating...doesn't smell great. I wipe it off with paper towels, apply bbq sauce. 4 hrs later I take the brisket off. It looks pretty good, but has the same brownish grayish wet look and this liquid is even puddled in the low spots...edges are burnt well, but no bark on top.
Got a nice smoke ring but the taste is too smokey and kinda harsh...leaves a bad after taste.
What am I doing wrong?
Results...
Here is a problem that I had on Sunday and seen last smoke about 2 wks ago.
Smoker Prep: One charcoal starter full of plain kingsford with 3 pieces of dry mesquite on top (3 inch diameter, 4 inches long, bark on). I let it burn until the mesquite breaks apart and hardly smokes....kingsford is half the original size by then.
I put the kingsford on the grate, add about double amount on top of new, not started briquettes, put mesquited embers on top of that. New briquettes are smoking like crazy.
I put a 3 pound pork tenderloin on the bottom rack, fat down, and 7 pound brisket (flat only) fat down on the top rack (both were cryovac, not frozen at the time, warm rinse, rubbed with mustard, dusting of Lowry's seasoned salt, covered with brown sugar)
Temp outside is mid 40's.
Temp rises gradually and in about an hour I'm at 200-225 where I stay.
At 3 hours I open the top for the first time. I had a wired temp probe in the tenderloin and it says 175, so I take the tenderloin out. It looks very nice...(gave to my daughter, will get a report on taste tomorrow).
I decide to put bbq sauce on the brisket when I put the top rack back on. I notice that the brisket is covered with a brownish grayish wet spotty coating...doesn't smell great. I wipe it off with paper towels, apply bbq sauce. 4 hrs later I take the brisket off. It looks pretty good, but has the same brownish grayish wet look and this liquid is even puddled in the low spots...edges are burnt well, but no bark on top.
Got a nice smoke ring but the taste is too smokey and kinda harsh...leaves a bad after taste.
What am I doing wrong?
Results...