Grilling and Smoking Season

LadyFish

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Mar 18, 2003
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Well it's that time of year again when we fire up the grills and smokers and incinerate food and call it BBQ.<br /><br />What are your favorite recipes?
 

one more cast

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May 6, 2002
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Anything cooked on the grill! My favorite veggie on the grill is zucchini quartered the long way drizzled with olive oil and sprinkled with Canadian steak seasoning.
 

LadyFish

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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Mr. LF makes this all the time and everyone including me raves about it. I discovered it when I went to Tenessee last year and have been hooked ever since.<br /><br /><br />Low And Slow Pulled Pork<br /><br />1 Boston Butt roast, about 5 pounds<br /><br />Rub:<br /><br />1 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar<br />1⁄2 cup granulated garlic<br />1⁄2 cup kosher salt<br />1⁄2 cup paprika<br />2 tablespoons granulated onion<br />1 tablespoon dry mustard<br />1 tablespoon Creole seasoning<br />1 tablespoon chili powder<br />1 tablespoon ground red pepper<br />1 tablespoon ground cumin<br />1 tablespoon ground black pepper<br /><br />Sauce (we double this recipe):<br /><br />3/4 cup cider vinegar<br />1/2 cup ketchup<br />1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce<br />1 garlic clove, minced<br />1/4 cup chili sauce<br />2 tablespoons chopped onion<br />1 tablespoon brown sugar<br />1 tablespoon lemon juice<br />1/2 teaspoon dry mustard<br />Dash of ground red pepper<br /><br /><br />Hardwood chips, soaked in water for 1 hour (we use pecan chunks)<br /><br />Apple juice, for spritzing<br /><br />Cooking Directions<br />Stir together all rub ingredients in a bowl. Store in an airtight container. Set aside.<br /><br />Stir together all ingredients for the sauce in a medium saucepan over medium heat; bring to a boil. Reduce heat; simmer, stirring occasionally, 40 minutes.<br /><br />Divide sauce into separate containers for basting and servings at the table. (Basting brushes used on raw food should not be dipped into table sauce.) Use as a basting sauce during the last 10 minutes of cooking for steak, pork, burgers, or chicken. Discard any remaining basting sauce, and refrigerate any leftover table sauce.<br /><br />If needed, trim the fat back to about 1⁄8 inch thick on shoulder. Sprinkle meat generously with rub, massaging it into the meat. Wrap tightly with plastic wrap, and chill overnight in the refrigerator.<br /><br />Smoking a large piece of meat takes a long time, so you’ll need to get an early start. Prepare your smoker or grill until the temperature reaches 250 degrees F. Take the meat out of the refrigerator, and let it sit for about 30 to 45 minutes. Having the pork at room temperature is very important, because if you put it on the smoker cold, the outer portion will burn.<br /><br />Smoke is one of the main ingredients of good barbecue. Soak hickory wood chips (or any other hardwood chips used for barbecuing) in water overnight. This prevents them from burning. The chips smolder, producing smoke that flavors the meat during the cooking process. The smoke also lends a pink color to the outer inch or so of the flesh, creating what is called a “smoke ring.” A handful of wood chips should be added to the fire every 30 minutes or so. The more you add, the stronger flavor of smoke you get.<br /><br />Place meat on the smoker fat side down. After two hours, turn the meat over so it is fat side up. Total cook time will be 1 1⁄2 hours per pound. Maintain the temperature in the smoker between 225 degrees F and 250 degrees F. Use a pit thermometer for an accurate reading If the smoker temperature is hotter than 250 degrees F, the meat will cook too quickly; any lower than 225 degrees F, and the meat will not get done. Every time wood chips or charcoal is added, spritz the meat with apple juice from a spray bottle. This will add moisture and a fruity background flavor during cooking.<br /><br />Remove the meat from the smoker with two hours remaining, and place on heavy-duty aluminum foil. Spritz generously with apple juice, and tightly seal foil around pork. Place meat back on the smoker, and cook for two hours more. Using an instant-read meat thermometer, check the internal temperature of the thickest part of the meat, being careful not to touch bone with the tip of the thermometer. When the internal temperature reaches 195 degrees F, the pork is ready. Cooking the<br />meat beyond the USDA guideline of 160 degrees F renders out the fat and tenderizes the meat.<br /><br />Remove the meat from the smoker, and let it cool for 15 to 30 minutes. Remove foil after it has cooled enough to handle. Remove the bones, which will easily pull away. Begin pulling, or shredding, the meat with two large forks, and place in a large baking dish or pan. Remove and discard any remaining fat.<br /><br />Add the sauce to pulled pork, and toss. This is a popular way to serve pulled pork in most regions. If you prefer, serve with additional sauce.<br /><br />Serves 12-14
 

JGREGORY

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Jun 1, 2003
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Squash marinated in kens balsamic vinigrete then quikly roasted on the grill.<br /><br />Beer chicken, and hickory smoked baby back ribs, yum.
 

fixin

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Joined
Apr 23, 2004
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

No grilling today,gonna deep fry some fish(crappie and Catfish)onion rings,mushrooms,peppers,hush puppies,and anything else I can find!
 

Barlow

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Mar 11, 2003
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

thought it was beer and fishin' season :confused: :confused:
 

Vlad D Impeller

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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

I was'nt hungry until i encountered this thread :( <br /> That LadyFish sure knows how to make a fella drool :D
 

jimchere

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Jun 30, 2003
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Alright LF I got lotsa ways for pork butt and ribs and deer neck, and etc, but yours sounds good and I'm gonna give it a try.
 

Kenneth Brown

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Feb 3, 2003
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

LF's recipe will work very well with a brisket also. The key to those bigger cuts of meat is slow and low. Although the meat is technically done at 150-160 you want to let it get to 190 and hold it at that temp for about 6 hours for brisket, 2-3 for pork butt.
 

deputydawg

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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

I grill year round. Been made fun of for grillin in a blizzard. <br />Favorite is plain old hamburgers. Big half pound burgers. Cook them til the centers are light pink and enjoy.
 

PW2

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Apr 21, 2004
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Go to the supermarket, buy a rib-eye steak.<br />Crank up the grill and throw it on, only long enough that it is still blood red, and with a little care, it would recover.<br /><br />Sadly, we can't get good beef here locally, like I used to get out west. Not sure where the good stuff goes, but it isn't at the supermarket.<br /><br />There is good beef accross the bridge in Canada, at half the price, but you get thrown in jail if you try to bring it back across the border...
 

SS MAYFLOAT

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May 17, 2001
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Try deep fried corn on the cob. Small ears 2 to 3 minuets and large ears 3 to 4 at 360*. Tried it last year and was amazed by how fast it cooks and the taste is great. A turkey frier works great for preperation. Don't fry it in the husk, makes a mess and doesn't taste as good.<br /><br />Going to try your tasty receipe Ladyfish. Thanks for sharing it with us.
 

LadyFish

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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Trust me you won't be disappointed Jim and SSM. :) <br /><br />We use our Oklahoma Joe Smoker for this recipe. When I had it in Tennessee they served it on a cornbread pancake with cole slaw on top. Its my favorite way to have it but I can't convince the masses yet.<br /><br />They also serve you a vinegar sauce to sprinkle on top. That sauce is made from approx. 1/4 cup of red pepper flakes and 1 & 1/2 cup of apple cider vinegar. It only take several hours to ferment but the longer you have it the better it gets. If you want it spunkier just add more flakes.
 

rolmops

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Feb 24, 2002
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

I got together with 4 friends and we bought a 17 month old black angus steer who is now in our freezers and will have left afore said freezers by the end of the summer.
 

roscoe

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Oct 30, 2002
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Ok ladyfish, What is a Boston Butt Roast?<br /><br />I used to have a food scorcher.<br /><br />I got a new smoker/cooker last year and have used it quite a bit.<br />Whole chickens, turkeybreests, whole pork loins, beef tenderloin, brats and italians, fish, meatloaf, chuck roast. Everything must cook for 2-5 hours. Gonna try the smoked sweetcorn this summer. Still use the old food scorcher for quick food like burgers.<br /><br />Had a hard time on New Years day as it wouldn't get hot enough, it was -19* outside.
 

jsfinn

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Nov 26, 2003
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

There are a lot of people here that are experts in things that I am not. Grilling is where I can honestly call myself an expert. It's on of my favorite things to do and will grill with 4 feet of snow on the deck.<br /><br />Tonight I made blacked chicken, a couple of filet minons and some corn.<br /><br />We cooked the potatoes inside because we were running short on time. <br /><br />Filet minon is one of my favorite things to cook and it's easy. The key is to grill it really hot to sear in the juices - flip it 3 times and get the grill marks just right and leave it pink in the middle. <br /><br />I also like to slice potatos into about 1/8 inch slices, coat them in olive oil, and grill them up with salt and pepper. They get crispy and turn into grilled chips. MmmMMm Good.
 

jsfinn

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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Oh, another thing - if you're going to smoke your meat, or use mesquite in the grill, try throwing some apple wedges on the grill too. They turn out really nice.<br /><br />Goes very well with BBQ chicken, too.
 

LadyFish

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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Originally posted by roscoe:<br /> Ok ladyfish, What is a Boston Butt Roast?<br />
roscoe, it's not actually a pork butt, its a shoulder roast. I have no idea why they refer to it as a butt. :)
 

90skichallenger

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Apr 18, 2005
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Re: Grilling and Smoking Season

Because the term for the joint where that piece of meat is connected is called a butt joint
 
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