RevrendAndy wrote:Learned a lesson yesterday. I was smoking a brisket and I didn't leave myself enough time. It was an 8 1/2 pound flat and at the 7 hour mark it was hovering at about 140°. With 8 hungry people and the salad course beginning, I really needed to have this cooked in 8 hours and knew I needed to speed up the process. I removed the water pan and sure enough, at the 8 hour mark it was the requisite 197°, albeit more charred than usual. I let it sit for about 5 minutes before slicing and it was dry. The taste was good but that's the 1st brisket I've done that wasn't mouthwatering juicy. I guess you can't speed up low and slow.
jimswside wrote:kenji wrote:Explain the heat sink, please. Also how you keep from burning your deck up. I'm out on the ground with my equipment cause I worry about burning the house down.
I have a large resistant grill mat I use most time, guess I forgot to lay it down Sunday.
The water in the bowl acts as a heat sink(holding temps down(or up in below freezing), some use sand, or other fillers. I have found with a bit of experimentation this summer to use the WSM with an empty bowl, or no water bowl at all. So far I prefer the cooks without water in the pan, or no pan at all.
tyrus wrote:I've been using less and less water in my WSM bowl after reading about your success. I find that I have a hard time getting the WSM in the 220-250 range if I use a full water bowl. Almost empty of water, I can get it to about 230. For some reason, I just can't keep heat in that thing.
I think the first few smokes I had too much charcoal (lump) and it smothered the "fire." Then I scaled back and used less but it didn't seem like I had enough to get it to temp. So then I started playing with the water and realized that if I used less water, I'd get a little higher temp. Now, it's a royal PITA as I have to check the coals every hour or so and stoke them a little to keep the heat but the water trick is helping. I was following "Low and Slow" by the book but realized I wasn't having the same results as mentioned in the book. It was close but variables like lump charcoal brand/size, amount of charcoal (the book's recommended amount just didn't fit in the smoker with the water bowl), outside temp, water levels, etc kept getting me frustrated. BTW, before you ask, the vents are all wide open but the WSM doesn't seem to draft well enough. It's been frustrating, especially after smoking ribs for 5 hours only to have to finish them in the oven. I'm a bit jealous of my neighbor's Big Green Egg at this point. Maybe a b-day present for myself.
I don't have a WSM, so I can't comment on that (I use my standard 22.5" Weber for everything, including smoking), but this one sentence had me scratching my head. Two whole Wall Street Journals?! Maybe there's something wrong with your charcoal - I never use more than a sheet or two of newspaper to get a chimney full of hardwood charcoal going.tyrus wrote:(today I used two whole WS Journals to get the coals white hot)
stevez wrote:FWIW, I always use Royal Oak and I've been very happy with it.
tyrus wrote:It's a learning process but it's a fun one. I mentioned earlier that I wasn't getting the same results as the Low and Slow book but that's okay. I think the overall lesson in that book is to learn how the manage the fire, get a feel for temp, and be better able to judge where the meat is in the smoking process. I feel so much more confident about these things because of the book and probably wouldn't have even gotten to these posts if I didn't have the confidence gained from a few early successes with that particular book.
tyrus wrote:Thanks to everyone that replied with their suggestions as well as those who PM'd me. This is why I always highly recommend the LTH community - very helpful folks.
I tried some ribs on Sunday and also had the same temp issues at first and then as the smoke went on - maybe 2 hours in - I stoked the coals and got them hotter. This worked well but also shot the temps way up to the 250-275 range - a bit hotter than I needed. The ribs were a bit overcooked but still were pretty good.
I think the suggestion upthread is the one I'm going to try - lit/unlit ratio. I think that there is just too many unlit coals at the beginning and it stunts the fire. I going to try to get the smoker nice and hot with a couple of chimneys of hot coals and use the water bowl and vents to manage temps.
It's a learning process but it's a fun one. I mentioned earlier that I wasn't getting the same results as the Low and Slow book but that's okay. I think the overall lesson in that book is to learn how the manage the fire, get a feel for temp, and be better able to judge where the meat is in the smoking process. I feel so much more confident about these things because of the book and probably wouldn't have even gotten to these posts if I didn't have the confidence gained from a few early successes with that particular book.
Darren72 wrote:Also, how long do you wait after you dump your lit coals on top of the unlit coals before you put the body of the WSM on? The longer you leave the body off, the more oxygen the fire has, and the faster your unlit coals will light.
tyrus wrote:
Has anyone ever smoked a tri-tip (ala Lillie's Q)? I'd like to try that...