O.K., I was lucky enough to have a work-at-home day on this wonderful Spring Friday. A perfect day for stoking the smoker in the early morning, then laying on the meat for my first bbq of the season (I promise that I did work during the 10-12 hours of smoking).
The smokees were four nice briskets and three pork roasts from Costco, dry-rubbed and held overnight) and about six pounds of fresh, nicely spiced hot links from Tony’s on Elston. The woods were oak and hickory.
To monitor the smoking temp, I used a new remote thermometer that displays both meat and smoking chamber temp. Not spot-on accurate, but close enough. I used a second back-up remote for the meat temp. I’m an expatriate Texan, and I’ve been doing this enough to have developed a sixth sense about the heat source, but I used the remotes because of the long trek: out of courtesy to my nice Albany Park neighbors in the Spring and Summer, I haul the smoker out near the alley between garages. The alley provides a nice smoke-pull effect that takes the stream away from open windows. During the Fall and winter, I smoke under a protected area under my back-yard deck.
Anyway, after a day at 200 degrees, here’s the result:
Briskets and hot links at the start
Pork roasts
Briskets
Brisket
Brisket and hot links
Pulled pork and sauces (of course I have cole slaw for the sandwiches)
Because I really DID work during the day, I opted for the easy way out regarding sauces: I had a bottle each left of my favorites of the two Carolina commercial sauces: Shealy’s S.C. mustard sauce and Scott’s N.C. vinegar sauce. These are both great, and available by mail-order:
http://www.shealysbbq.com/
http://scottsbarbecuesauce.com/
Um . . . my brisket needs no sauce, thank you, except, perhaps, for chopped brisket sandwiches fashioned from the “burnt” ends.
Yow . . . You don't think that our esteemed City Council would ever ban outdoor meat-smoking . . . . ?
Cheers,
Wade
"Remember the Alamo? I do, with the very last swallow."