Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator cook

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Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator cook

Postby RobbiePool » 11 Jun 2013, 10:19

Hi, new to the forum and reasonably new to BBQ cooking. Two years ago I bought my Weber 57cm kettle. Last year I upgraded the grill to cast iron and invested in the Maverick temperature probes. This year I got my instant read Thermapen and the Smokenator 1000. I got the Smokenator from an online store in Denmark. The first cook I did with the Smokenator was some ribs and that didn't go so well. I'm still trying to settle on a good fuel and think the briquettes we get offered here are only ok in an emergency. I went to Grillstock Bristol a few weeks ago and had a blast.

On Saturday morning I went to my local Booker for their 12kg Restaurant-grade lump charcoal. At £9 I think it's great value and I'm hoping that this will become my "go to" fuel. Most people use briquettes with the Smokenator in the USA but ours are so bad for ash I think it ruined my first ribs cook (lesson learned was knock ash off - a lot!). While I was in Booker I grabbed a 7.5lb pork shoulder for £10 pretty much on impulse and decided to cook it this Sunday.

When I got home on the Saturday I made up a rub from a Stephen Raichlen recipe, unrolled the joint, and got it well covered. I wish I'd have kept the netting because it was never going to keep that tight shape but it was sitting ok on my roast pan. I stuck it in the fridge and sent out some invites for 6pm Sunday.

Sunday morning I woke up wondering if I should get cracking and decided to light my chimney starter with 12 briquettes at 7am. I felt a bit geeky out there so early but they all know me round here as a three bbq a week man. In the Smokenator I got it pretty full of the lump charcoal and some apple wood chips. Once the starter briquettes lit, I put them in, added the water tray, the maverick grill probe, and closed the lid. After just 15 mins it was going at a steady 250f so I went and got the joint.

I was expecting the lump to burn faster and hotter so was prepared for some temp fluctuations throughout the day but they never really came. It just went 230-260 all day. I was knocking off ash and adding charcoal every hour and topping up the water. I had some beer I put in the water tray for luck as well. Some of the lumpwood chunks were huge so I used a screwdriver and hammer to get them small enough to fit in the smokenator holes. I've read that keeping the lump a sensible size is good practice anyway.
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After about 5 hours I started measuring the internal temp. I used my Thermapen in anger for the first time and it was about 133f. By 3pm, after 8 hours, it was 160f. I was getting through some of my beers too at this point! I was worried about it taking longer than 6pm to get to 195f so I switched to a faster method that I had seen in the Slow Fire book. I put foil on the meat, got rid of the water tray and added more lump in the extra space. Using the vents I kept it up at around 350 for another 90 mins. In the last half hour I took the foil off in an attempt to crisp the outer a bit more. By 6.30pm I caved in and took the meat off despite it only reaching about 185f. It still had to stand for half an hour! I couldn't believe how much fat was in my drip pan. Imagine forgetting to put that in!
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The crackling came off great and pulling it was fun although I used my knife more than my fingers. I used a North Carolina vinegar sauce and a simple coleslaw using the same sauce. It tasted delicious and only 15% was left after my 8 guests had had their seconds.
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So I had a really good learning experience with the Smokenator. It was the first time I'd done pulled pork too. Will go back to ribs next and see if I can get those right.
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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby MrJaba » 11 Jun 2013, 11:11

Hi Rob,

That looks great! I've got a 57cm Weber and smokenator myself. So far I've found the smokenator quite tricky to use for re-fuelling as I was using the Blue bag restaurant grade lumpwood and getting it into the smaller pieces was a bit of a pain. I've just tried it with Aussie Heat Beads the other weekend and they were great, much easier to re-fuel with and meant I could keep the water pan in the proper place too.

I've just also finally attached my party Q as well, and can't wait to give that a shot. With the smokenator it's supposed to be a pretty good setup.

Jaba
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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby AndyHull » 11 Jun 2013, 11:17

Wow your first time pulled pork looks fab.
Hope the first time i try it it goes as well.

Could you put a link up for the smokenator please guys?
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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby RobbiePool » 11 Jun 2013, 11:29

Thanks both for your comments. I'd read about the Aussie heat beads, will definitely try those next time I see them.

I spoke to Dr Sweetsmoke at Bristol about his Party Q and I know I'm going to get one. That will have to be next year's upgrade though :-) This cook went so smoothly I was beginning to think a Party Q might be overkill. You've still got to top up the water regularly so it won't ever be completely hands free but I love the idea as well as the novelty.

The Danish company I bought the Smokenator from is
http://www.tbsgrillshop.dk/

The postage was steep at about £40 and I bought the hovergrill at the same time meaning the purchase was about £100 total. Still, I'd seen it in use many times on youtube and thought I should have one. The Danish company are very good and the guy tweaked his website for me (and you) so it would allow UK delivery addresses.

Jaba, what else have you done with your Smokenator and what will be your first cook with the Party Q? Was it easy to install? I heard you should aim it into the main area, not the smokenator bit.

Cheers!
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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby MrJaba » 11 Jun 2013, 12:37

I've done quite a few cooks with the smokenator now, ribs, chicken, pulled pork, brisket all have turned out pretty well! I do seem to have a rather temperamental bbq though, the temps are never very consistent! So I'm hoping the partyQ will fix that.

With the smokenator, I don't actually ever use the water pan these days. I did to start off with, but found it never added much to the end product. I'll spritz with a water bottle instead if necessary.

The PartyQ was bought at grillstock too after talking to Dr Sweetsmoke! haha. It was a right pain to fit though, but mainly as I didn't have the right tools and there was no guide on what tools to use. Now I know it needs a step drill, and a decent drill... once I had those it was pretty easy.

Jaba
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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby Eddie » 11 Jun 2013, 12:46

:D Good job :D

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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby PeanutZA » 11 Jun 2013, 17:36

Hmmmmm. Smokenator.....does delivery stay that price for more than one?

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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby RobbiePool » 12 Jun 2013, 07:26

Hi Jaba, I think the water pan serves two purposes - one is keeping the atmosphere in the kettle humid to prevent drying out. The other is helping to regulate the temperature of the oven. If you've stopped using it then that might explain some of the fluctuations you're getting.

PeanutZA - I ordered a second item from the Danish company, a hovergrill and the delivery stayed the same price. It would be a good idea to find a friend who wants a Smokenator too and share the delivery costs.

Cheers.
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Re: Hi all Rob from Gloucester. First successful Smokenator

Postby MrJaba » 12 Jun 2013, 08:28

Hi Robbie,

I use a thermal brick from an old storage heater to increase the thermal mass of the kettle, which is what the water pan helps to achieve, but it's a bit better at it as it's designed to hold heat for longer and release it slowly. It's very good for getting it back to temp after you take the lid off. I don't use the water pan at the start as that's when the bark is forming and I found I got a better bark without it. Spritzing later on in the cooking process with water/apple juice etc keeps it all from drying out :)

Jaba
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