new member

Please stop by and say hello when you first join. Let us know who you are, where you are and anything else you want to share.

Moderator: British BBQ Society

new member

Postby paulfire » 09 Jun 2013, 08:58

hi all
Thought I was an expert at BBQing, bought an Excel 20, discovered I was a grill jockey not a BBQer. First try - ribs, too smokey. Second try - wings, awesome. Third try - full chicken (4.5 hours), raw bits. Fourth try - pork shoulder joint (12 hours), good but needed another 2 hours really!
Yes I use a remote digital thermometer, yes I have been using the water tray half full (sand or bricks next), I have tried diferent briquettes......!
Its all down to experience, new equipment and new methods of cooking take time to master (if ever), reading other peoples advice is valuable but you have to actually do the time. I will become competant, won't I???
paulfire
Got Wood!
Got Wood!
 
Posts: 98
Joined: 12 May 2013, 23:29
Location: Bolton, Lancashire

Re: new member

Postby zammo25 » 09 Jun 2013, 09:36

I'm certainly no expert but I've used several different fuels already and I %100 recommend heat beads, from my limited experience they're easily the best I've used. Light well enough and last forever in my excel.

Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk HD
zammo25
Got Wood!
Got Wood!
 
Posts: 22
Joined: 13 Apr 2013, 19:37

Re: new member

Postby paulfire » 09 Jun 2013, 14:09

Thanks Z, I am sure that most of my problems are fuel/fire related, getting the right heat for the right length of time seems to be the key (obviously), and gaining experience of the equipment, types/cuts of meat etc. Like most men I expect to produce perfectly cooked BBQ every time - not going to happen !!!!
Forgot to thank all at ProQ, I actually ordered a "Frontier" but they contacted me, said they had sold out of Frontiers, 7 week wait!!! Would I accept an upgrade to an Excel with Mac's approval, at no extra cost. I of course accepted, delivered 24 hours later, excellent customer service I think.
paulfire
Got Wood!
Got Wood!
 
Posts: 98
Joined: 12 May 2013, 23:29
Location: Bolton, Lancashire

Re: new member

Postby keith157 » 10 Jun 2013, 06:37

It is practise and getting a baseline set. In other words change only one variable. Get head beads, get comfortable with them, then decide on water, sand or clay etc.
User avatar
keith157
Moderator
Moderator
 
Posts: 3816
Joined: 05 Aug 2011, 13:35
Location: Stevenage, Herts

Re: new member

Postby From The Sauce » 10 Jun 2013, 07:36

I love the Pro Q it is what I started on and with a bit of practice easy to use. I never used water/ clay or bricks though, it just took too much heat out for me. There is no substitute for practice, you will get there - you have the right kit.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
User avatar
From The Sauce
Got Wood!
Got Wood!
 
Posts: 52
Joined: 27 Jul 2011, 10:20

Re: new member

Postby PeanutZA » 10 Jun 2013, 08:12

As Keith says, try limiting the variables. Sounds like you have changed the food type every time? I took it easy and stuck to one thing while I learnt.

Sent from my GT-I9100 using Tapatalk 2
PeanutZA
Got Wood!
Got Wood!
 
Posts: 119
Joined: 25 Apr 2013, 16:47

Re: new member

Postby RobinC » 10 Jun 2013, 08:34

paulfire wrote:Its all down to experience, new equipment and new methods of cooking take time to master (if ever), reading other peoples advice is valuable but you have to actually do the time. I will become competant, won't I???


You've hit the nail on the head there. Advise is useful (very) but experience is king. I've been doing low and slow for 3 years or so now and I'm still learning & refining. Make sure you have fun
RobinC
Rubbed and Ready
Rubbed and Ready
 
Posts: 802
Joined: 21 Jan 2011, 10:11
Location: Cheshire/Shropshire border

Re: new member

Postby Eddie » 10 Jun 2013, 08:45

Welcome to the forum fella.

Eddie
User avatar
Eddie
Rubbed and Ready
Rubbed and Ready
 
Posts: 848
Joined: 08 Jan 2011, 02:40
Location: Ashford Kent

Re: new member

Postby keith157 » 10 Jun 2013, 09:07

If it was easy it wouldn't be as much fun. Then of course once you've mastered cooking your butt (which you will), there is a whole panoply of rubs & sauces to experiment with to enghance the flavour of the meat. Learning low & slow, I'll be finding new flavours as I spit in the devil's eye ;)
User avatar
keith157
Moderator
Moderator
 
Posts: 3816
Joined: 05 Aug 2011, 13:35
Location: Stevenage, Herts

Re: new member

Postby The Foodtaster » 10 Jun 2013, 11:07

Welcome to The Forum :D
The Foodtaster
Got Wood!
Got Wood!
 
Posts: 118
Joined: 03 Aug 2012, 13:14
Location: Stevenage, Herts

Next

Return to Introduce Yourself

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests