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There really is some great information in this thread. I'm just one of the many contributors.@olbriar Do you realize there is a Grilling Guide/Cookbook imbedded in this thread?
YOU! Should write it.
You've already coined the title so...
Like all things its a give and take, and in this thread I feel I've unfairly taken more than I've given, especially going back to @olbriar chatting up the pellet grills. Thankfully that's the spirit of BBQ, pals helping pals....to mention one great source...
I can't suggest anything better than that. You nailed it my friend.I've never done a spatchcock cook on a turkey. Whole chickens turn out great! If my memory serves me, @Unforgiven did a spatchcock turkey but my memory often fails me. Perhaps he'll chime in.
If I were attempting the cook, I'd brine the bird over night. Then I'd rinse the bird off and cut the spine out and then break the bird down. I'd then butter up the bird and even separate the skin from the breast a bit and butter that as well. I'd then season the bird with salt, pepper, rosemary, and sage. I think I'd try cooking the bird meat side up at 325° - 375°. Spatchcocked will quicken the cook but I'd start the bird early without a clue how long it might take to cook. The thigh is the meat to check for temp and 165° would be my target. My guess is two, three, or maybe four hours cook time. I just don't know. I like to rest my cooks so as I said, I'd start it early.
I hope Unforgiven will have better information for you. It sounds like a fun cook and I'm sure it will be great. Enjoy...
<------is jealous of your new toy.The maiden cook on my new Green Mountain Jim Bowie prime was flat iron steaks. I cooked them low and slow, wrapping them at 160° and put them in my hot box when they reached 195°. They were generously seasoned with coarse salt and coarse pepper after they were rubbed down with avocado oil. I spritzed them with apple juice and worchestershire sauce. They are so good and tender if you don't mind investing five hours or so in a die for steak. Well worth the time in my opinion.
The new smoker performed well. I instantly fell in love with the shelf out front of the cooker. It makes everything so much easier. I was not that fond of the WiFi though it worked. After the wrapping of the steaks, I opted to use my normal BT probes for monitoring my cook. The Wifi might have merit if your cook was that predictable. It's set up to cook off of a chosen cook profile that you create or using a preset profile. It will cook at a given temp until the profile tells it to change the temp. That can be by time or by a temp reached. Monitoring that cook or editing along the way can be done from the phone. That's all well and fine but it's not spritzing the meat and it isn't wrapping it either. And I'm just not going to set up and cook and come back hours later.. just not my idea of smoking meats. I'm the guy that wants smoke in his eyes and an excuse to grab another brew. I like my BT probes better. Set an alarm temp and it lets you know when it's reached it's target. It eliminates the guesses when you want to do something even when you might get distracted. Everything else about the cooker worked as it should. Smoke is smoke and it made plenty of it. It was very good at holding a given temp only varying a degree or so once in a while from it's setting. The auger is a bit noisier than my old smoker but the fans made less noise. No biggie on either.. just an observation. I liked the smoker and loved the steaks it smoked. I foresee a lot of fun on the patio in my future.
They are indeed. When I was a kid, my mother often made her soups out of beef ribs. The meat was cheap and darn good when slow cooked. Now it's a delicacy and it's price reflects that. The ribs make a great eat when smoked out. It's like steak on a stick. Fun and tasty they are and incredibly tender. The ribs I see at my local market have all but no meat beyond the bone, just the connecting tissue between. The racks I was eyeballing at Costco had a good inch and a half of meat on them. They were beautiful.Beef ribs are to darn big.
That bone.
I use the seal a meal all the time and keep meat frozen for months without issue. I just use the retail Seal-A-Meal or whatever they are called. I've burned through 3 of them in the past 15 years or so. I do buy my rolls of bags on Amazon as they are about $0.10 on the dollar versus the retail bags.Speaking of those beef ribs, I've experienced the volume packing problem before. Passing up those ribs have pushed me over the top. I'm seriously considering the purchase of a food vacuum sealer. With such a tool I could have easily cut that rack into fourths and vac-packed three portions for future smokes and had one portion to smoke tomorrow. I could have put the fourths in freezer zip-locks but they aren't good for long term storage. I'd love to have a vacuum chamber but I don't want to invest that much and storing it would be a problem. I've looked at the external vac sealers and they vary a lot in price. I don't mind seriously investing in the project and I only plan on buying once. The cheap models do not interest me. The popular mid range units I've found have a pretty short service life. So, I'm looking at the low end "commercial" vac sealers. The unit that is at the top of my early research list is the ARY VacMaster Pro 350. If anyone has experience with or opinion on vac sealers, I'd certainly enjoy your input.
I was wondering how the marinading worked. It sounds pretty cool. I find the unit I'm interested in on Amazon but at a crazy price. ($800 & $1,200) I find it elsewhere at $330 or so. It's big brother can be had at Amazon for $400 and it will do 16" wide bags. I can't see the need for that and naturally it's more expensive. I have found the one I like at a restaurant store online. It's priced within my budget and considerably cheaper than I can find it elsewhere. In fact, it's so much cheaper, I'm a bit leery of purchasing there. I googled up your sealer and it looks legit. If you are getting five years use from one, and at it's price, perhaps I need to rethink my purchase. I only plan on buying once but I doubt I'll live to 200I use the seal a meal all the time and keep meat frozen for months without issue. I just use the retail Seal-A-Meal or whatever they are called. I've burned through 3 of them in the past 15 years or so. I do buy my rolls of bags on Amazon as they are about $0.10 on the dollar versus the retail bags.
That one you listed is pretty reasonable prices for a commercial one, so it may be worth the extra for a beefier device.
Also, you can do quick marinading of meat as the vacuum sealing draws the marinade into the meat.
Let me put it this way, if I was to buy one today, for the price, I'd go with one of those ARYs. They aren't much larger than the one I have (discontinued) and being built for commercial use should hold up to more vigorous elements. I killed my previous two by drawing too much wet (meat juices, marinade, etc.) into the vacuum, because the mitigation thingies built in weren't up to snuff. I'd expect them to be better with a commercial product. Plus, looks like bigger motors (so better / faster vacuum), wider sealer (so you get fewer failed seals, which are rare, but they do happen), and you can get attachements (which I never use, so I don't bother ).I was wondering how the marinading worked. It sounds pretty cool. I find the unit I'm interested in on Amazon but at a crazy price. ($800 & $1,200) I find it elsewhere at $330 or so. It's big brother can be had at Amazon for $400 and it will do 16" wide bags. I can't see the need for that and naturally it's more expensive. I have found the one I like at a restaurant store online. It's priced within my budget and considerably cheaper than I can find it elsewhere. In fact, it's so much cheaper, I'm a bit leery of purchasing there. I googled up your sealer and it looks legit. If you are getting five years use from one, and at it's price, perhaps I need to rethink my purchase. I only plan on buying once but I doubt I'll live to 200
Let me know how it works out and congrats. Here are the rolls I bought last...It's all your fault. You talked me into it. I went with the bigger unit. At least I have the option for the big bags but will likely use the 12" most often. After reading up on some forums, I bought from a different vendor. It cost me fifteen dollars more for a better line of communication and customer relationship. I hope I don't need to bother them but I feel better knowing I can. The unit comes with some bags and a 50' x 12" roll. What brand are you using @Unforgiven ? I'd like to snag up a 15" roll and I should be set. I'd post up a review when I receive it but I have nothing to compare it to so it would be pretty lame. Pretty excited to press it into service however.