JeffB
TVWBB Pro
Once you light your charcoal in your chimney, it's my understanding that most people wait for the coal to "ash over" or "gray over" before dumping the lit charcoal on the unlit charcoal in your WSM.
Clearly, the coals at the top of the chimney have lit on fire and are burning before they are ashed over, so....why wait to dump them?
Haven't you wasted valuable resources (read: "burning time") if you wait to dump the lit coals until they have ashed over?
I guess another way to ask the question is this: In the "life" of a charcoal briquette, at what % of the burning lifespan does the briquette ash over? Does it his "ash" at 10% and then burn for another 90%? Does it ash over at 30% and then burn for another 70%? If it's >10%, aren't you wasting valuable cooking time by waiting longer to dump the lit coals?
I suspect there is an actual reason for doing this other than "that's how I learned to cook," but I don't know what that reason is. Just curious what everybody else thinks.
I must have too much time on my hands to be making posts like this.
Clearly, the coals at the top of the chimney have lit on fire and are burning before they are ashed over, so....why wait to dump them?
Haven't you wasted valuable resources (read: "burning time") if you wait to dump the lit coals until they have ashed over?
I guess another way to ask the question is this: In the "life" of a charcoal briquette, at what % of the burning lifespan does the briquette ash over? Does it his "ash" at 10% and then burn for another 90%? Does it ash over at 30% and then burn for another 70%? If it's >10%, aren't you wasting valuable cooking time by waiting longer to dump the lit coals?
I suspect there is an actual reason for doing this other than "that's how I learned to cook," but I don't know what that reason is. Just curious what everybody else thinks.
I must have too much time on my hands to be making posts like this.
