Matt wrote:Head's Red BBQ wrote:Matt - my point was that this cut does not have the high volume of internal fat that needs to be rendered out over a long period of cooking time so IMO I dont see any advantage to cooking this lean of a meat low and slow
if you can achieve the same results grilling indirect at a higher cook temps with some wood chunks.
anyone give it a shot and post some results
Head's Red -- I figured it would be more of a indirect-with-smoke type of cook (as opposed to true low and slow) and perhaps should have clarified that, as I've had it done that way before (but have never done it before). You are correct that there is little internal fat; what fat there is is more of a fat cap on the rack. Actually your proposal of 325-ish seems to be consistent with what a friend who has smoked a rack of chops before used (and I tried the end product, which was quite good) -- 300-325 for about 3 hours, to an internal temp in the low 150s. I should also mention I will be doing this on a Big Green Egg, which is arguably more forgiving of these cuts of (non-traditional BBQ) meats than traditional smokers because of the ceramic and the way the air circulates. We'll see how it goes; perhaps I will try to chronicle it photographically if I can find our camera.
Matt wrote:I should also mention I will be doing this on a Big Green Egg, which is arguably more forgiving of these cuts of (non-traditional BBQ) meats than traditional smokers because of the ceramic and the way the air circulates. We'll see how it goes; perhaps I will try to chronicle it photographically if I can find our camera.
Matt wrote: Bone-in loin roast is just over 4 pounds -- so relatively small.
G Wiv wrote:Matt wrote:I should also mention I will be doing this on a Big Green Egg, which is arguably more forgiving of these cuts of (non-traditional BBQ) meats than traditional smokers because of the ceramic and the way the air circulates. We'll see how it goes; perhaps I will try to chronicle it photographically if I can find our camera.
Matt,
Big Green Egg, thought you were using a WSM for some reason, no matter, just as easy on an Egg. If you are an experienced Egg man, and have a device such as the home-brewed Raised Grid or one of the setups from the Ceramic Grill Store that allows you to raise the grate up to the felt line without using the Plate Setter then by all means go direct on the BGE. If you don't have a device that raises the grid use the Plate Setter in leg-up position and run the BGE in the 350 range.
Please do not overcook the pork loin, 140, with carry forward as the roast rests, is the perfect temp.
As a matter of curiosity, how big is this bone-in pork loin?
Good luck, have fun and please let us know how it turns out.
Enjoy,
Gary
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:Jim, do I see a smoked mac-n-cheese there in the smoker?
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:Jim, do I see a smoked mac-n-cheese there in the smoker?
Ronnie, I always smoke the 5lb boxes of hot links from Peoria in one big coil like that 'cause I wasn't sure what else to do with them, twist them off into individual links you say? So obvious, I must be some kind of idiotLooks like you had a delicious weekend!
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:That doesn't bode well! Still, I've had smoked cheese that I've enjoyed very much, there ought to be a way to make a mac & cheese work smoked as well.
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:That doesn't bode well! Still, I've had smoked cheese that I've enjoyed very much, there ought to be a way to make a mac & cheese work smoked as well.
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:I smoked some eggs a while back and thought they turned out pretty well, next up, eggs smoked and then pickled with jalapenos and habaneros! (smoked in the shells long enough for the whites to hold their shape, then cracked the shells with the back of a spoon to get some smoke inside, still the smoke flavor was mild. I think for the pickled eggs I'll also smoke some of the jalapenos and habaneros to get more smoke flavor into the brine)
G Wiv wrote:Matt wrote:I should also mention I will be doing this on a Big Green Egg, which is arguably more forgiving of these cuts of (non-traditional BBQ) meats than traditional smokers because of the ceramic and the way the air circulates. We'll see how it goes; perhaps I will try to chronicle it photographically if I can find our camera.
Matt,
Big Green Egg, thought you were using a WSM for some reason, no matter, just as easy on an Egg. If you are an experienced Egg man, and have a device such as the home-brewed Raised Grid or one of the setups from the Ceramic Grill Store that allows you to raise the grate up to the felt line without using the Plate Setter then by all means go direct on the BGE. If you don't have a device that raises the grid use the Plate Setter in leg-up position and run the BGE in the 350 range.
Please do not overcook the pork loin, 140, with carry forward as the roast rests, is the perfect temp.
As a matter of curiosity, how big is this bone-in pork loin?
Good luck, have fun and please let us know how it turns out.
Enjoy,
Gary