jleblanc05 wrote:How funny, smoked my first chuck yesterday! Just made a rub with some garlic, pepper, vulcan salt and threw it on. It cooked for about 8 hours with a shoulder. And tonite, it too will be a mexican feast - tacos!
MelT wrote:Hey all -
I just ordered a whole lamb shoulder from the butcher, and plan on throwing that thing on the WSM this weekend. It is an 8.5 lb cut that basically looks like the whole front quarter of a small lamb, from the neck down the front leg to the knee and back to where the chops would start. Anyone ever do anything like that?
I am thinking I can't go wrong low and slow to internal temp of about 185-190. Please let me know if I am way wrong.
I am thinking about a rub heavy on garlic, cumin and dried Mexican oregano.
Head's Red BBQ wrote:Also found a nice Thai cucumber salad recipe on Amazing Ribs site that I am going to try
G Wiv wrote:Head's Red BBQ wrote:Also found a nice Thai cucumber salad recipe on Amazing Ribs site that I am going to try
Meathead's cucumber recipe is tasty, and I've made it a few times, though I am partial to the following recipe from Low & Slow
Thai-Style Sweet and Sour Fresh Cucumber
SERVES 6
2 large cucumbers, peeled, halved lengthwise, seeded, and thinly sliced
1 small red onion, thinly sliced
1 teaspoon dried crushed red pepper flakes
4 tablespoons sugar
1⁄2 cup water
5 tablespoons white vinegar
1⁄2 teaspoon kosher salt
Place the cucumber slices, onion, and pepper flakes in a heatproof mixing bowl.
Combine the sugar and water in a saucepan over medium heat, and gently simmer until the sugar dissolves, about 5 minutes.
Remove from the heat and stir in the vinegar and salt.
Pour the liquid over the cucumber mixture and stir.
Cover and refrigerate.
Allow the salad to marinate 1 to 2 hours before serving.
stevez wrote:It's a great recipe, but I've been using a little more vinegar (or a little less water) than the recipe calls for. I find the OEM version to be a bit watery for my taste.
stevez wrote:I've been making Gary's recipe lately in order to use up some of the cucumber bounty that we've been haivng. The cukes are just about the only thing that did well in our garden this year (compared to a "normal" year). It's a great recipe, but I've been using a little more vinegar (or a little less water) than the recipe calls for. I find the OEM version to be a bit watery for my taste.
G Wiv wrote:stevez wrote:It's a great recipe, but I've been using a little more vinegar (or a little less water) than the recipe calls for. I find the OEM version to be a bit watery for my taste.
Steve,
Are you using white vinegar?
Glad you like the recipe, its one of my favorites.
Enjoy,
Gary
stevez wrote:G Wiv wrote:stevez wrote:It's a great recipe, but I've been using a little more vinegar (or a little less water) than the recipe calls for. I find the OEM version to be a bit watery for my taste.
Steve,
Are you using white vinegar?
Glad you like the recipe, its one of my favorites.
Enjoy,
Gary
As per your suggestion, yes. I haven't tried it yet with rice wine vinegar, but I will.
P.S. I'd suggest trying the recipe as written first. I'm a known cucumber hater. I feel that they contribute nothing to any dish they are used in other than dilution of flavor (Crunch you say? That's what carrots are for), so my evaluation of this dish might be skewed. The lone exception to my disdain is when they are the featured ingredient such as in this salad.
abf005 wrote:Think I'll scrub out the smoker, re-season it and get it ready for winter this weekend. With the big travel schedule I have in front of me I can't see wanting to fire it up again until Thanksgiving for my turkey. Which this year will be done with post oak... I've had that Louie Mueller cracked pepper, light salt & oak smoke flavor stuck in my head since this summer!
Head's Red BBQ wrote:i assume i can substitute rice vinegar?..i dont usually keep white vinegar in the house..mainly use rice vinegar and apple cider vinegar
Head's Red BBQ wrote:abf005 wrote:Think I'll scrub out the smoker, re-season it and get it ready for winter this weekend. With the big travel schedule I have in front of me I can't see wanting to fire it up again until Thanksgiving for my turkey. Which this year will be done with post oak... I've had that Louie Mueller cracked pepper, light salt & oak smoke flavor stuck in my head since this summer!
i need to get a sample of those post oak chunks from you to see what all the fuss is about..
scrub the smoker???
abf005 wrote:Head's Red BBQ wrote:abf005 wrote:Think I'll scrub out the smoker, re-season it and get it ready for winter this weekend. With the big travel schedule I have in front of me I can't see wanting to fire it up again until Thanksgiving for my turkey. Which this year will be done with post oak... I've had that Louie Mueller cracked pepper, light salt & oak smoke flavor stuck in my head since this summer!
i need to get a sample of those post oak chunks from you to see what all the fuss is about..
scrub the smoker???
No problem, next time I see you I'll give you some. As I recal that backwoods uses about ten 4"x2" size chuncks for an all night burn right?
Head's Red BBQ wrote: not quite that many..unless im using straight apple wood maybe
abf005 wrote:Head's Red BBQ wrote: not quite that many..unless im using straight apple wood maybe
Oak is a softer smoke, you'll want to taste more of the wood and not as much of the lump
jimswside wrote:got my pork butts for Sundays picnic from Sages today, (2) 6+ # butts ... if they are as good as the spares I got 2 weeks ago they will be great, unenhanced, fresh cut, local pork... mercy....
I am going to inject them tomorrow with a marinade that consistes of o.j., apple juice, worstershire, brown sugar, and hot sauce. Then I will rub them with yellow mustard, anda new rub I have. Then into the fridge until 10:30 p.m. tomorrow, thinking 12 hours on the "smoker" will get them to 195-200. Using Lump, Oak, and cherry in the GOSM. I also have a finishing sauce I may use after pulling(cider vinegar, brown sugar, red pepper flakes, black pepper, and cajun seasoning.).
The GP wrote:Jim-
Sounds fantastic. Can't wait to try it!