What kind of instaread do guys have? Gonna need a new one of those too since mine literally fell apart today,
Ordered. You had me at dead nuts.I’ve had this one from Amazon for a few years now. It’s dead nuts on and instant. I legit couldn’t ask for anything more and it’s 15 bucks.
Ordered. You had me at dead nuts.
Was not my best effort. More tough than I wanted but was ok, solid B. View attachment 147063
Dont stick it in to see if the meat has thawed. The stainless probe may stick inthe frozen meat and pull off exposing the sensor cable. I simply inserted the cable back and put a spot of super glue where it connects. Just a warning. I own two of these and love them.
No. Chicken actually turned out phenomenally.Did the chicken not get the same love as the brisket?
Having family over for lunch on Sunday, planning to smoke a couple bone-in pork shoulders. But I won't be able to do it Sunday morning. So I'm thinking of smoking the meat on Saturday afternoon/night and then reheating it for brunch/lunch on Sunday.
Haven't really done this before. Any suggestions on best way to reheat to avoid drying out and preserving the most flavor? I was thinking of just putting the cooked meat in an aluminum pan, adding some water or some of the leftover juices, covering, and heating in the oven.
Better ideas?
Anyone have some "off the wall" type recipes that they like? I'm in the mood to do something out of the norm on Sunday. Nothing spicy because the kids won't touch it. The only thing I've thought of is a fatty of some sort.
I've got a pellet smoker, Weber Kettle, Weber Gasser and a Blackstone at my disposal.
If these are bone in normal size shoulders you wouldn't be starting them Sunday morning anyways, they'd never be done in time. Plan on 1.5-2 hours per lb at 225 and definitely err on the side of caution in the case of a long stall.Having family over for lunch on Sunday, planning to smoke a couple bone-in pork shoulders. But I won't be able to do it Sunday morning. So I'm thinking of smoking the meat on Saturday afternoon/night and then reheating it for brunch/lunch on Sunday.
Haven't really done this before. Any suggestions on best way to reheat to avoid drying out and preserving the most flavor? I was thinking of just putting the cooked meat in an aluminum pan, adding some water or some of the leftover juices, covering, and heating in the oven.
Better ideas?
Fatty's are always tasty, they haven't really got a lot of love in the last decade on the BBQ scene but they always go over pretty well.Anyone have some "off the wall" type recipes that they like? I'm in the mood to do something out of the norm on Sunday. Nothing spicy because the kids won't touch it. The only thing I've thought of is a fatty of some sort.
I've got a pellet smoker, Weber Kettle, Weber Gasser and a Blackstone at my disposal.