So, I posted my frustrations with the weather New Years day
here. I had 6 slabs of babybacks that I was looking forward to smoking on the WSM but the weather had me concerned. But, because of the posts following mine on that thread, I was inspired and decided to forge ahead regardless of the bitter cold. However, as you'll read below, there were challenges presented, but there's a happy ending here for sure! Here we go:
First, of course, I had to prepare my babybacks with my rub:
Easy enough...
Next, I figured I should shovel my concrete deck, which was relatively easy:
Time to open up the WSM and get ready to light up right? Well, this is when I faced a hurdle, to say the least:
I don't know if you can tell clearly from this photo what's going on but it was frozen! Frozen water--a block of ice with old coals mixed in. All I could say was "Holy sh*t, what the hell do I do now?"
BUT, I had an idea:
As you can see, I figured why not just light my starter on that mess and maybe it will melt everything? I just added that extra sheet of newspaper for a little more burn.
I also decided to place the middle cylinder over the starter with the side door removed. In just a few minutes, it was a beautiful site:
It's working!
After the chimney was nice and hot but yet a few minutes away from being ready for the cook, I took it down and dumped out what, hopefully was going to be a bunch of dirty water from the bottom of the WSM.
The good news: the icy mess definitely melted and it did pop out of the WSM. The bad news: It hadn't melted completely and was essentially a dome of ice and the small grate that holds the charcoal was stuck on the bottom of the dome. (sorry no pic--I forgot to take one)
So, lifted this dome and started to smash it on my concrete deck hoping that it was loose and melted enough to break apart. After about 5 good wacks:
And the bottom of the bullet which was a mess was now ready:
I even fired up my gas grill for the sole purpose of heating up the 2 WSM cooking grates so I could clean them with ease:
Little tip from me to lth. This method works great if you have a gas grill. You need some good heat-resistant gloves though. BTW, that's some pulled pork burning away which was left on the grill grate from a few months ago.
Eventually, things got back to normal and the bullet was ready to roll:
And about 3 hours later...
Although the bullet was consistent at approx. 190 degrees through the whole cook, and it was about 0 degrees outside with the windchill, the ribs were done surprisingly quicker than the last time I made babybacks. BTW, in case Prof. GWiv is reading this, don't be pissed about the oven thermometer! I already
graduated!
Believe it or not, I actually enjoyed the adversity. Mainly, I'm proud I didn't give up and that the ribs were a hit!
"Skin that smoke wagon and see what happens..."
- Wyatt Earp, Tombstone