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First step to making barbecue like a Texan would be to spell the word correctly. It is brisket, brisquit is some fru-fru French way of saying it...Vegas boy.
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You should see the barbeque my dad built years ago. Roughly an 8' by 8' by 8' cube. We would do 300 to 400 pounds of meat every July 4th, for the family, cousins, aunts and uncles, etc. Pork ribs, pork loin, brisket, sausage, rabbit, quail, baloney (yes, baloney) and many other meats. The fire (hickory, of course) would be started the night before and tended through the night. About noon on the fourth, it would all be ready.
We used a five gallon sprayer to baste the meat. Then there were the cobblers for dessert..... JR |
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Travelers Rest, South Carolina
Posts: 8,795
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Mine is a K40 from Pacific Gas Specialties. We added the auxillary burner to the left side instead of the shelf. It's small, but adequate. We'll probably go to a larger one mounted into masonry next time.
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Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: N. Phoenix AZ USA
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You live in the same town that makes one of the best BBQ/smokers made, the Hasty Bake. Grew up eating out of one of these and one of the first things that I bought when I moved back to the states was a Hasty Bake.
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2013 Jag XF, 2002 Dodge Ram 2500 Cummins (the workhorse), 1992 Jaguar XJ S-3 V-12 VDP (one of only 100 examples made), 1969 Jaguar XJ (been in the family since new), 1985 911 Targa backdated to 1973 RS specs with a 3.6 shoehorned in the back, 1959 Austin Healey Sprite (former SCCA H-Prod), 1995 BMW R1100RSL, 1971 & '72 BMW R75/5 "Toaster," Ural Tourist w/sidecar, 1949 Aeronca Sedan / QB |
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74 Targa 3.0, 89 Carrera, 04 Cayenne Turbo http://www.pelicanparts.com/gallery/fintstone/ "The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money" Some are born free. Some have freedom thrust upon them. Others simply surrender |
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A Man of Wealth and Taste
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Out there somewhere beyond the doors of perception
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Hey Moses it is better to buy one of the better rigs than to build one in the Backyard...simply if U move, U can take it with you. Also the attention to detail... those little features that make a BBQ unit more user friendly are incorporated.
I am a little ticked at David Klose at the moment though...When I ordered my unit I wanted a Gas burner in the firebox to help light the Wood/Charcoals. Klose said he didn't do that because of safety reasons, now a year and half later he is offering an option of having a gas burner in the Firebox. I think that not only would that be usefull in starting a fire, but also after a prolonged cooking session (10 hours or longer) it would make it easier to finish cooking, as you wouldn't have to constantly tend the fire. Briskit is usually wrapped in Tin Foil after the first 4 to 5 hours of cooking, as the smoke flavor has allready been imparted.
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Where do you guys get your wood? I would like to try a variety.
Usually do: chicken or steak Most unusual: pizza Did a 20lb turkey for T.G. last year. Best ever.
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1974 911s "It smelled like German heaven" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ySt9SeZl9s |
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A Man of Wealth and Taste
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Out there somewhere beyond the doors of perception
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Here in LV there is a place on Nellis Blvd that sells BBQ wood and firewood. One of their biggest clients in the RIO Hotel Casino. They buy 2 Cords aweek of Olive wood. They charge $12 a Bag for 40 lb of Mesquite Hardwood Charcoal and $4.00 for 2 cubic ft bag of BBQ Hardwood Logs. They do give a volume discount.
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Location: Davidson NC
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There has no doubt been more heated discussions over BBQ than any other food.
I'm from Eastern NC, ground zero of the pork BBQ where the whole pig is cooked and chopped. The gold standard is Parker's in Wilson, but I will say that is personal opinion and arguments for a dozen other eatings places claiming gold standard status could be made. This BBQ in Eastern NC is unique and available in about a 100 mile radius of Wilson. It is not difficult to cook a whole pig and it is done with wood typically although some use gas. It is not smoked but cooked over coals. 80# pig takes 60/80 lbs charcoal. Cook open side down over indirect heat for about 7 hours @ 150 to 170*F. Turn the pig over when the shank and ham bones are loose. Then baste with the sauce which is simply apple cider vinegar, crushed red pepper and salt. When I lived for years in So. Ca. I had it air freighted in on dry ice and usually kept some in the freezer with the slaw and corn sticks as well. There ice tea is even a special blend and I kept that on hand also. Since I lived so far away they gave me the name of their supplier and I purchased my tea direct from the source. Good stuff. Here is a link showing pictures from the tea to the vinegar - you have to have it all at once for the full experience. http://www.roadfood.com/Reviews/Overview.aspx?RefID=2131 Worth mentioning - late last year I discovered a place on I 95 at the Fl / Ga line - the last exit in Ga. - Blue's BBQ. Blue is an ex Ga Bulldog football player turned BBQ entrepreneur and his stuff is incredible. Here is a picture of his place and you can see his cooker on the side showing the fire box. That cooker is 30 feet long and runs 24-7. Blue sells a lot more Q than what he pushes through that one window. You get it at the one window and eat in your car or at one table provided - like a Tasty Freeze. ![]() Last edited by BertBeagle; 02-17-2007 at 05:39 PM.. |
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I will say this also - it's not the arrow - it's the Indian. A good cook doesn't need a fancy grill.
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A Man of Wealth and Taste
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Out there somewhere beyond the doors of perception
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I've used a $4 Hibache for so long the metal crumbled, I've used the same Weber fo over 25 years, I've used a Brinkman Water Smoker...it was just a pain in the A$$ to use, I turned out some great Q for a decade on a 35 Gallon Drum BBQ that I got way down Century Blvd in LA that was bought for me by a Bro... I've used a New Braufel Vertical unit, a Big Green Egg and now finally a David Klose Texas style oil Pipe BBQ. What makes the Klose a good BBQ is the thickness of the metal..1/4 inch on the Chamber and 1/2 inch on the Fire Box...it maintains a consistant temp without wild variation and isn't constantly in need of more fuel to maintain that temp. So I say buy a good unit to begin with and skip the BS. Thats not to say every unit has its own learning curve to get the optimum outa it.
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Who is John Galt?
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Knoxville, TN
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'79 911sc Targa '02 slk230 kompressor '84 Tamiya Falcon A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world's greatest civilizations has been 200 years. |
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i'm just a cook
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: downtown vernon,central new york
Posts: 4,868
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i have a friend that supplies me with scrap cherry wood from the stickley furniture factory. sometimes the pieces he brings me are actually too nice to burn.
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I have no doubt eaten my weight in BBQ cooked in a 250 gallon heating oil tank cut in half at the equator, hinged and put on wheels with a trailer hitch (always wondered if it was actually used for heating oil or started life as a new unused tank). Probably eaten more cooked on a make shift cooker consisting of cinder blocks stacked up about 3 high with pieces of 1" electrical conduit or rebar across the top and the pig laying on top of a piece of concrete reinforcing wire mat. Used a 55 gal drum with rebar across about 1/2 way up to burn wood and turn it into coals. Had a hole cut in the bottom for shovel access to get the coals. Add a cooler of beer, get the slaw and corn sticks from Parkers and the whole rig works good in the front yard, especially if you have a couple of old couches or upholstered recliners close by to sit on while it's cooking. Better stop - getting to close to my roots. ECU here as well - '66 Sorry tabs I know this is your thread on smoked pork. |
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It's all about the HP.
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1974 911s "It smelled like German heaven" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ySt9SeZl9s |
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