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Tips for using your Barbecue Smoker
By Ron Goodwin - May 18, 2008

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Other Pig Facts and Articles
Food and Grilling Safety
Sichuan Cuisine for People who Like Spicy Foods
Types of Barbecue Grills
Outdoor Cookers
Tips for using your Barbecue Smoker
Add Asian Flare to your Cooking
Grilling Tips
Cooking of Pork
Recipes for Left Over Pork
Butchering a Whole Pig
Pork and Religion
Feral and Wild Pigs
Submit Recipes using Pork

BBQ Smoking Taboos - DONT'S:

Please don't confuse it with Grilling - This is one of those rookie things that always separate hard-core barbecue enthusiasts from the uneducated public. Remember, grilling is a quick, hot fling you have with a steak, hamburger, or hot dog.. while barbecue describes the day(s)-long relationship you have with a rack of ribs, a pork shoulder, a beef brisket, etc. Much more finesse is required for barbecue, as well as a whole lotta time

Lighter Fluid - Unless you enjoy the taste of petroleum distillates (i.e. gasoline, kerosene, paint thinner), don't even try it. Your food is going to have a long time to get acquainted with your fuel source, and we don't want smoke to be replaced by fumes.

Self-lighting briquettes - these little lazy guy¯ lumps are basically lighter fluid sponges .see above.

Liquid Smoke - This stuff is made by burning green¯ wood and liquefying the resulting smoke. If properly cooking barbecue over wood coals, WHY WOULD YOU EVEN CONSIDER IT? The only place I've seen it used, where it might¯ make sense, is in a barbecue sauce, but even that is debatable. Everywhere else, including jerky, is fraudulent. It's like opening up a can of Spaghetti-O's and calling it Fine Italian Pasta.

Ovens - At NO TIME should an oven be considered as part of the barbecuing procedure. Therefore, it is IMPOSSIBLE to make barbecued ribs in the oven. You can make some great oven-cooked ribs, but please don't call them barbecued.

Boiling Ribs - the ultimate taboo.. Most of the taboos listed above have one or two exceptions that will keep you from getting hung, but this one NEVER EVER EVER EVER should a rib of ANY type come into contact with boiling water unless you're making soup. If you need to boil them to make them tender, hang it up and order take-out.

Crock Pot w/Barbecue Sauce - Ugh, a cross between the oven taboo and the boiling ribs taboo... need I say more? Throw some foil in the mix and you've just insulted the entire barbecuing community.

Best Cooker - asking a man what the best barbecue rig is, is akin to asking him who the best ball team is. Everyone has an opinion, and everyone else disagrees. Be very wary when asking for this opinion topic, as it could easily get out of hand.. and if you use the word ceramic or egg¯ in your question you better DUCK!

Favorite Meat - very regionally sensitive discussion. Various parts of the nation have their own version of barbecue, which involves different cuts of meat from different animals. Generally speaking: east is pork ribs, southeast is pork shoulders and whole hogs, south is beef and brisket.

Wet or Dry - sauce or on the side. Very much like meat, this preference is displayed along regional lines, with the eastern folks liking the sweet and/or vinegary sauces, and the Texans liking the spicy tomato or DRY situations.

Lump or Briquettes - Here's one near and dear to my heart. When I started this hobby, I had a Brinkman Offset, a pile of hickory logs, and a bag of a certain brand of charcoal briquettes (hint: they may be the king of charcoal briquettes). Some fine fine cooks tell me that they don't notice anything different between fuels, but others say that there is a nasty, bitter, acrid, chemically smell/taste they find when using certain royal and kingly briquettes.. and I'm inclined to agree.

Cooking with flaming logs or glowing coals - right off the bat, I'll say that BOTH are right.but one is much harder and, for me, much more expensive. The traditional purists¯ insist that the original barbecueing pitmasters would burn their wood all the way down to coals before adding food to the pit. Then, they would add glowing coals to the pit as the cook progressed, preburned in another area. But, when cooking with flaming wood, you must be careful to have just the right fire going or you'll ruin your food with bitter creosoted smoke. (small hot fire with almost invisible smoke) When using preburned coals, you don't run that risk but you waste a lot of wood and spend a lot of time preburning and shoveling.

Soaked or Dry - small discussion item, but both sides of the camp on this one. When using wood chunks or chips in the smaller cookers, most folks will soak the wood in water to prolong the smoldering and keep the wood from bursting into flames. The downside is that some people can smell/taste a difference in the quality of smoke produced from a soggy piece of wood. I've done both, and in some situations NEED to do one or the other, depending on the cooker I'm using.

Sauces - tomato, vinegar, or mustard - this goes back to that regional¯ thing again. I hate stereotypes, so forgive me if I'm doing this, but historically, different regions of the country tend¯ toward the various flavors. Again, this is a discussion item. For these regional¯ types though, I find the discussions less hostile and more constructive.. listen to what folks like and decide for yourself.

Foil or No Foil - OK, here's a hot one. Back to the traditional guys, foil was never used back in the day¯, so obviously it doesn't belong here and now right? Well, that's the argument, along with the problem of food steaming¯ while in foil. Again, like we said in the taboo section, you can get away with foil if you're done cooking and keeping the food warm but be prepared for a discussion¯ if you wrap the food in foil while cooking.

Gas and Electric? - All I'll say here is that traditional barbecue does not involve alternative forms of heat. You can make food that is close, but it won't be the same as cooking with wood and charcoal. If you're that lazy, order take-out.


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