Live Smoking- #Beef #Ribs Hit The Freshly Refurbished 2008 @webergrills One Touch Gold Kettle at 5:20AM @CaptJoeLobster #GloucesterMA #BBQ

4:40AM Light The Chimney with about 12 Kingsford briquettes and set up the pit for snake method smoking using mesquite chunks and cherry wood chips.

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Outside conditions 39 degrees with a light drizzle.

I’m trying a little something different as the beef ribs are so rich and I wanted to cut back on the salt so I put together a beef rub consisting of-

3 tbsp restaurant grind black pepper

1 tbsp onion powder

1 tbsp sugar

2 tsp granulated garlic

2 tsp ancho powder

1 tsp cayenne powder

At the dollar store I picked up this $1 sugar shaker to use to disperse the rub.

First a light slather of yellow mustard for the rub adhesive and then  I applied ground Himalayan salt to the ribs as if I was seasoning a steak ( a lot less salt than the 50/50 pepper salt ratio I was using before).  Once the salt was on I shook on the rub using the sugar shaker.

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5:20AM Ribs Hit The Kettle-

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6:57 Update: Temps have fluctuated from 250- 325.  I’m not sweating the temps, they’ll be done when they’re done.

9:40AM.  Probably the first time ever that I didn’t lift the lid once start to finish.  The temps within the first hour varied from 250-325 but after exactly two adjustments she settled into a much tighter range of 270-289.

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They were fantastic but probably could have benefited for spritzing at 20 minute intervals during the final hour.  I also will absolutely use this rub again as they had a much better pepper/salt flavor.

 

 

 

In Honor Of St Patrick’s Day- Corned Beef Brisket Point Guest Post From Bill O’Connor of www.northshorekid.com @kidns

Bill writes-

Hey Joe,

With Saint Patrick’s Day just around the corner, there are some great deals out there on brisket.  $1.66/lb at Stop and Shop – point cut. It was packed in a completely saturated brine, and I should have soaked it in plain water to cut the saltiness. I didn’t figure this out until the first taste of the finished product.

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Unpack. Rinse. Salt. Pepper. Let sit [covered] until it reaches room temp.

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Low and slow is the way to go.  Grill dome top temp was 300 – 350°, offset fire, bricks and hardwood charcoal mix, soaked mesquite chips, pan with water. I figure the dome top temp is 75-100° higher than offset area of grill.

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Beef is pulled at ~165-170° internal temp.

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Bark.

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Yep.

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Wrapped plastic over foil – try it. Rest for at least an hour.

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Luckily I cooked something to eat because we were too hungry to wait out the rest period. Salt, pepper, low and real slow.

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End cut.

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Money.

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Live Smoke- Texas Style #Beef #Ribs On The @WeberGrills Kettle On www.northeastbbq.com

Follow along the live smoke all morning at www.northeastbbq.com

5:30AM Set up the kettle with a aluminum pan filled with water and briquettes set up snake style around the bowl for a low and slow sesh.  Lit 12 briquettes inn the chimney and dumped them on the left end of the trail of briquettes which we’re looking to gradually catch and provide steady even heat between 275-300 degrees.  using cherry chips and mesquite chunks.

I’m not sure if it’s just our local Stop and Shop market that pre-cuts the racks of beef ribs or if it’s done elsewhere as well.  I buy what’s on sale usually and they had 2.4 lbs on sale for $2.24 per lb so I couldn’t pass them up (you can’t see the sale tag in the first picture).

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Slathered them up lightly with yellow mustard and applied a generous coating of coarse salt and black pepper (Texas Style rub).

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The pit set up and getting up to temp.  Water in the pan to keep a moist smoking environment-

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6:24 The Beef Ribs Hit the pit.

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8:39AM Cranking along Grate temp 284 degrees. Only adjusted the vents once since 6:24AM  Got a ways to go.  Haven’t opened the lid once.  “If you’re looking-you ain’t cookin.”

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9:54AM 3.5 hours in-

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11:45AM- They’re all jiggly and the probe slides right in so it’s time to take ’em off-

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Live Smoked Pepper Stout Beef On The @WeberGrills Kettle Using @TheWolfePit Recipe

Follow the live smoke all morning at http://www.northeastbbq.com

Larry from http://www.thewolfepit.com has my favorite bbq video series check out his site at the link above for this recipe.

Set up the Kettle for the snake method using briquettes, cherry chips and mesquite chunks.

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Got a third of a chimney going and dumped the asked over coals onto the left end of the briquette “fuse” looking to keep temps around 250 degrees for smoking the beef.

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Applied Worcestershire sauce to the chuck roast and then coated with coarse salt and black pepper.

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Once the pit hit 250 degrees tossed the beef on and inserted the probe.

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Closed the lid and started chopping the veggies. Chopped half a green pepper, a whole red pepper, two jalapeño peppers with the seeds, three Cloves of garlic minced and a half of a red onion in
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Once the beef hits 165 internal we pull it off the pit and add a half  a bottle of cherry root beer and a couple of tablespoons of Worcestershire sauce to the pan with the veggies, plop the beef roast on top and seal it up in foil. Opened the bottom vent on the kettle and will let it braise til it falls apart.

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After a couple of hours it hit 200 degrees internally but wasn’t pull-apart-effortlessly tender. So I covered it up until I could break it up easily.

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Once it broke apart easily it was shredded like you would shred pulled pork.  Then left for about twenty minutes more uncovered to reduce the liquids even more.

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When done, piled on top of onion rolls with a slice of pepper jack cheese and some chipotle mayo.

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Delicious.  The guys at the dock all raving about it.  Serious heat.  if the people you are cooking for won’t enjoy the heat, cut back on the jalapeno pepper.

Thanks To Larry from http://www.thewolfepit.com for the recipe. Check out his site, it’s fantastic!

Fatty and Some Pork Belly Hit The @StokGrills Charcoal Drum Because- Why The Hell Not?

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Set up the pit using the snake method with the charcoal arranges from 9oclock to 3 o’clock.  Place some fruit tree chunks on top of the coals and some cherry chips if you have them.  The idea is to place about ten lit coals at 9PM and let them work their way slowly around the pit to not create too much heat all at once.

Then create a simple bacon weave.

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Flatten out some ground pork and place it on top of the bacon weave, add your favorite shredded cheese, some sliced onions, some rice and your favorite BBQ sauce.

Next roll your fatty up and pinch the ends together. Apply rub liberally

Place the fatty opposite side of the coals and close the vents so you get temps around 275.  Apply rub to the pork belly and place that alongside your fatty.

Once it reaches an internal temp of 160 it’s time to pull it off and slice it up-

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Oh don’t forget about the pork belly!

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