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Serious Eats reviews kamados

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Comments

  • Hans61
    Hans61 Posts: 3,901
    I'm not impressed with that article. "Most round-kamado aficionados concede that their best way of creating different heat zones is by moving foods closer to or farther from the fire."

    No $h1T!!! Moving food away from the fire is what indirect is...
    “There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
    Coach Finstock Teen Wolf
  • fljoemon
    fljoemon Posts: 757
    I love my 2-zone setup with the High-Que fire basket .. simple.



    LBGE & Mini
    Orlando, FL
  • tarheelmatt
    tarheelmatt Posts: 9,867
    Okay, I say lets get a group together and TP their place?  Who's in? 
    ------------------------------
    Thomasville, NC
    My YouTube Channel - The Hungry Hussey
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  • clemsontyger97
    clemsontyger97 Posts: 400
    edited June 2016
    All I know is I never recall getting complimented on my food until I cooked on my KJ.   And now every meal is like "holy crap that was good".  So grilling, smoking, whatever...I'm rolling with a kamado.
    --Because I'm like ice, buddy. When I don't like you, you've got problems.

    KJ Classic
    28" Blackstone
    South Carolina native, adopted Texan, residing in Olive Branch, MS.  Go Tigers.
  • Skiddymarker
    Skiddymarker Posts: 8,528
    fljoemon said:
    I love my 2-zone setup with the High-Que fire basket .. simple.



    The primo Oval set-up is similar with the fire box divider being a large chunk of pig iron that fits into tabs in the CI grate. Good add on products from the folks at High-Que, if they had this when I bought my Oval I might have considered a LBGE. 
    @Hans61 - actually you don't have to get food farther from the fire for indirect, you just need some sort of deflector between the burning lump and the food, height of the food is almost irrelevent. Not sure about the HQ set-up as I have never had the pleasure of using one, but in my Primo food on the non-fire side, on a grid as low as you can get it is cooler than if on the non-fire side higher in the dome. In other words the food physically closer to the burning lump is cooler than food raised away from the fire. The heat deflected from the dome is why this works. 
    Delta B.C. - Whiskey and steak, because no good story ever started with someone having a salad!
  • fishlessman
    fishlessman Posts: 34,572
    so many things wrong with that article, seems like someone thats never really understood how a kamado works and is way over thinking things. imagine using briquettes for an over night butt cook, i have used briquettes in the egg but its not something to do on an overnighter. oval cookers are more prone to base cracks verse round, not even mentioned =)
    fukahwee maine

    you can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it
  • pgprescott
    pgprescott Posts: 14,544
    fljoemon said:
    I love my 2-zone setup with the High-Que fire basket .. simple.



    We just got these in at our place and have yet to mess with them. Cool.

  • HoustonEgger
    HoustonEgger Posts: 616
    My take away is that they never actually used each of the units reviewed - they only referenced websites and other sources. 
    Formerly of Houston, TX - Now Located in Bastrop, TX
    I work in the 'que business now (since 2017)

    6 Eggs: (1) XL, (2) Large, (1) Small, (1) Minimax & (1) Mini - Egging since 2007
    Also recently gained: (1) Gas Thing (came with the house), (1) 36" Blackstone Griddle & (1) Pitts & Spitts Pellet Smoker
  • Dobie
    Dobie Posts: 3,458
  • Friggin' Maggots!  Oops!  Wrong thread.
    Flint, Michigan
  • HeavyG
    HeavyG Posts: 10,380
    My take away is that they never actually used each of the units reviewed - they only referenced websites and other sources. 

    You can go the AmazingRibs website and hit their equipment review section where they tell you which grills they have actually had hands-on experience with. There are even some videos they have made. I have no idea if they have hands-on experience with all the various kamados mentioned in the Serious Eats article but I know for a fact they have actually used a few of them.
    “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” ― Philip K. Diçk




  • northGAcock
    northGAcock Posts: 15,173
    Okay, I say lets get a group together and TP their place?  Who's in? 
    When did ya'll get TP up there? I am in.
    Ellijay GA with a Medium & MiniMax

    Well, I married me a wife, she's been trouble all my life,
    Run me out in the cold rain and snow
  • Carolina Q
    Carolina Q Posts: 14,831
    edited June 2016
    Okay, I say lets get a group together and TP their place?  Who's in? 
    When did ya'll get TP up there? I am in.
    Careful, bud, that stuff's rough as a cob!

    I hate it when I go to the kitchen for food and all I find are ingredients!                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

    Michael 
    Central Connecticut 

  • Darby_Crenshaw
    Darby_Crenshaw Posts: 2,657
    Okay, I say lets get a group together and TP their place?  Who's in? 
    When did ya'll get TP up there? I am in.
    Careful, bud, that stuff's rough as a cob!

    First time i tried using a corncob in an outhouse it hurt like hell. But then i found out you aren't supposed to stick it in all the way.  
    [social media disclaimer: irony and sarcasm may be used in some or all of user's posts; emoticon usage is intended to indicate moderately jocular social interaction; the comments toward users, their usernames, and the real people (living or dead) that they refer to are not intended to be adversarial in nature; those replying to this user are entering into a tacit agreement that they are real-life or social-media acquaintances and/or have agreed to or tacitly agreed to perpetrate occasional good-natured ribbing between and among themselves and others]

  • HeavyG
    HeavyG Posts: 10,380
    edited June 2016
    Okay, I say lets get a group together and TP their place?  Who's in? 
    When did ya'll get TP up there? I am in.
    Careful, bud, that stuff's rough as a cob!

    First time i tried using a corncob in an outhouse it hurt like hell. But then i found out you aren't supposed to stick it in all the way.  
    .
     
    http://www.badumtss.net

    .
    “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” ― Philip K. Diçk




  • Ladeback69
    Ladeback69 Posts: 4,484
    I use one of my broken plate setters to do 2 zone cooks on my XL.  Works rather well too.  
    XL, WSM, Coleman Road Trip Gas Grill

    Kansas City, Mo.
  • Hans61
    Hans61 Posts: 3,901
    @fljoemon - in my weber kettle I always considered food not over the hot coals to be indirect. I believe I can get a similar result in my extra large egg by moving food away from the fire without the use of my plate setter, especially at mid roasting temps. I agree with you that there's a good amount of heat coming off the dome in an egg, and I'd venture much more than a kettle lid; that's one of the features that makes a Kamado better than a kettle imo, but kettles don't have plate setters, and I think most agree there are 2 heat zones in them accomplished by coal and meat positioning...regardless, that divider box you posted looks really cool!
    “There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
    Coach Finstock Teen Wolf
  • SciAggie
    SciAggie Posts: 6,481
    All I know is I never recall getting complimented on my food until I cooked on my KJ.   And now every meal is like "holy crap that was good".  So grilling, smoking, whatever...I'm rolling with a kamado.
    Yeah I've had my bge now for about a year. I now have "groupies" on Facebook - friends that love to see what I cook. My family loves the food. Maybe I work at being a better cook more now, but I never had this success with a gasser. 
    Coleman, Texas
    Large BGE & Mini Max for the wok. A few old camp Dutch ovens and a wood fired oven. LSG 24” cabinet offset smoker. There are a few paella pans and a Patagonia cross in the barn. A curing chamber for bacterial transformation of meats...
    "Bourbon slushies. Sure you can cook on the BGE without them, but why would you?"
                                                                                                                          YukonRon
  • YukonRon
    YukonRon Posts: 17,261
    Blasphemy. They shall forever be banished. Obviously, they do not even know how to cook, because while in culinary school, they did drugs, and drank a lot.......oh wait....never mind.
    They got kicked out for not washing their hands after using the bathroom and after picking their noses. They rode the short bus too.
    "Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber

    XL and MM
    Louisville, Kentucky
  • bgebrent
    bgebrent Posts: 19,636
    YukonRon said:
    Blasphemy. They shall forever be banished. Obviously, they do not even know how to cook, because while in culinary school, they did drugs, and drank a lot.......oh wait....never mind.
    They got kicked out for not washing their hands after using the bathroom and after picking their noses. They rode the short bus too.
    Ron, you need another bourbon brother!
    Sandy Springs & Dawsonville Ga
  • texaswig
    texaswig Posts: 2,682
    2 zone cooking is overrated. It's called moving the food around if needed. The larger the grill the easier it is. Or maybe I'm just missing something. 

    2-XLs ,MM,blackstone,Ooni koda 16,R&V works 8.5 gallon fryer,express smoker and 40" smoking cajun 

    scott 
    Greenville Tx
  • DTEgg
    DTEgg Posts: 93
    @Dobie; I like the way you think!
    LBGE
  • DTEgg
    DTEgg Posts: 93
    Just read the article and then went to Amazing Ribs and read Max's article on the BGE there.  Same thing.  All Serious eats did is copy and paste, not real work involved.
    LBGE
  • KiterTodd
    KiterTodd Posts: 2,466
    That is odd.  They say "Here are my top 10 kamado cookers for your consideration," but they list the Akorn first and are not clear on if these are listed in particular order?

    I would agree that the Kamodo Joe offers fair competition for the BGE as it appears very comparable in build quality, but comes with a lot more options standard.  The rest of their reviews though are pretty off the mark.

    I have seen the Akorn in person. And while I would say it is a good budget alternative, quality construction is definitely not one of it's selling points..

    The Akorn is a double-walled, insulated steel egg that is much lighter and in some ways more durable than the popular Big Green Egg—and it's less than half the price. Char-Griller has mostly been known over the years for inexpensive grills, and, until now, you pretty much got what you paid for. But this design and Char-Griller's manufacturing process may be a match made in heaven.  

    I'm guessing there is some advertiser influence in this list.  I saw the Vision also and thought that was poorly constructed.

    I would also agree with other comments that you are buying a ceramic grill for a purpose, and if your primary goal is traditional open top grilling, use your weber with some nice lump.  You don't have to buy an oval egg.

    Interesting share, though.  Thanks.

    LBGE/Maryland
  • HeavyG
    HeavyG Posts: 10,380
    DTEgg said:
    Just read the article and then went to Amazing Ribs and read Max's article on the BGE there.  Same thing.  All Serious eats did is copy and paste, not real work involved.
    Max Good - of AmazingRibs.com - wrote the article for the SeriousEats site.

    It's not as if Serious Eats just copy/pasted stuff from AmazingRibs themselves as you suggest.
    “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” ― Philip K. Diçk




  • northGAcock
    northGAcock Posts: 15,173
    YukonRon said:
    Blasphemy. They shall forever be banished. Obviously, they do not even know how to cook, because while in culinary school, they did drugs, and drank a lot.......oh wait....never mind.
    They got kicked out for not washing their hands after using the bathroom and after picking their noses. They rode the short bus too.
    Ron.....you could use a good rub down at the spa! Hope you'll are doing well.
    Ellijay GA with a Medium & MiniMax

    Well, I married me a wife, she's been trouble all my life,
    Run me out in the cold rain and snow