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My egg is not even all together yet. Got it Tuesday night and its been raining ever since. Suppose to snow tonight but that's a joke in Charlotte. Anyway going to use my egg all weekend (I hope) bought thick rib eyes and chicken wings tonight. I usually marinate the wings and will prob have those Saturday. The steaks I want tomorrow. I have been reading all the post and trying to figure the best way for the first use. Along with the egg I have the plate setter because I originally wanted a smoker. I will have to get some help from my husband (putting it together) to begin with but I wanted this and I want to know what I am doing or know enough to use while I learn. I'm sure it never ends but that's the fun right. I would appreciate any feedback.
Angie
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Otherwise I wish I had read this thread before I started on the egg. I am sure others will chime in with good advise as well.
Green Man Group
If it got real high. You will wait a bit
I usually cook mine at 500 indirect but have cooked them at 400 raised direct many times.
I just meant it wasn't the op's plan.. a dare if you will.
In that case, take this example: When you light a candle, you smell it and see smoke. While it burns, you don't. Blow it out, more smell and more smoke. This is VOCs burning off;known as the "bad smoke". Same process with charcoal. If you cut off the accelerant to an efficient fire, it will cool and release stinky VOCs, which can overpower the food with smoke and stinky, bitter taste.
Science Rocks!
Steve
Caledon, ON
Steve
Caledon, ON
Welcome aboard-it is a game changer. What follows are some thoughts that may be of use- direct and indirect-the difference is the heat deflector (platesetter) between the food and the fire. With indirect ( heat deflector in place) cooks the dome thermo will run about 20-40*f higher than the grate when starting out. Longer the dome is shut the less the temp difference. On direct cooks, the grate will get the full measure of heat from the lump and the dome will be lower than the cooking surface. Raised grid (use fire bricks or empty (key word) beer cans (3 of them)) to elevate the cooking grid to around the gasket line or higher. This gets you further from the lump and closer to the dome temp. You have at least one thermometer to run this BGE with. Make sure it is calibrated and get comfortable with what the number it gives you means relative to the method you are using to cook.
A couple of things-BGE fire is air flow controlled (assuming you have enough lump and got it going). So, temperature control (aka fire volume) is a function of the amount of air flow through the bottom and out the top. You can control by top or bottom vent or combinations of each (preferred for low temp cooks). With any BGE (I have a LBGE) the trick is to catch the temperature rise on the way up to the desired end-point. You have a lot of ceramic mass and if it gets heated above the target temperature it takes a while to cool down. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />
So, with that-get a good mass of lump burning and then shut the dome and set your vents for the approximate final desired temp. Minor adjustments as you go. And remember, the feedback indicator to any adjustments is your dome thermo-and that will take a while. So, patience is the name of the game at the low & slow temps. Don't sweat "dead-on" temps for the low&slow cooks. 270*F+/- 30* is close enough. Just get the BGE stable (45- 60 mins) and then let it do the work. You can spend the cook chasing temperature (remember the fire is responding to air flow changes so the feedback loop has quite a delay time). Read all you really need to know here-
Best basic info site going- http://www.nakedwhiz.com/ceramic.htm Just an opinion and we all know what those are worth-enjoy the journey!
never
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