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New to the Egg

Sarends
Sarends Posts: 21
edited October 2017 in EggHead Forum
I am not a cook - thankfully my wife has been all these years!   Honestly, I am intimidated at how much there is to learn about cooking and I am an amateur compared to my wife.

However, I am the espresso Barista at our home and do a good job at that, and I really enjoy it. 

Enter the Big Green Egg

Been intrigued with the BGE for a while now so I decided three weeks ago to begin contributing a little more to our food preparation by the addition of a BGE, which I bought, and so far, I'm in love. I plan to manage the cooks, mostly. My wife thinks this is a great idea. 

What I've made so far:
1. Steaks - incredible
2. Ground round burgers - literally unbelievable
3. Norwegian salmon - so moist and interesting and lovely (and I really barely like fish)
4. Spratchcock chicken - just so so - kinda grossed me out for some reason. 
5. Boneless skinless chicken breasts - blown away by the moist tenderness and how easy it was

I enjoy the forum and look forward to learning tons more!


Comments

  • Hans61
    Hans61 Posts: 3,901
    Welcome friend!
    “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
  • JNDATHP
    JNDATHP Posts: 461
    Enjoy the journey! 
    Michael
    Large BGE
    Reno, NV
  • YukonRon
    YukonRon Posts: 17,261
    Welcome to the forum. Plenty of good folks here that will help, some of the best cooks I know, are these folks.
    Just a few words of warning:
    The purchase of your egg is the least expensive part of owning one. They don't call it the "Big Green" egg for nothing. Welcome to wallet genocide.
    It's worth it. Have fun.
    "Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber

    XL and MM
    Louisville, Kentucky
  • bluebird66
    bluebird66 Posts: 2,956
    Welcome!!
    Large Egg with adjustable rig, Kick Ash Basket, Minimax and various Weber's.
    Floyd Va

  • MeTed
    MeTed Posts: 800
    Welcome! You are among friends, ask questions, someone is always happy to help. Enjoy!
    Belleville, Michigan

    Just burnin lump in Sumpter
  • bgebrent
    bgebrent Posts: 19,636
    Welcome aboard.
    Sandy Springs & Dawsonville Ga
  • lousubcap
    lousubcap Posts: 36,873
    Welcome aboard and enjoy the journey.  Above all, have fun.
    Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood.  Life is too short for light/lite beer!  Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint.  
  • Welcome... just ask and you will get your questions answered....
    Charlotte, NC - Large BGE 2014, Maverick ET 733, Thermopen, Nest, Platesetter, Woo2 and Extender w/Grid, Kick Ash Basket, Pizza Stone, SS Smokeware Cap, Blackstone 36"
  • Yno
    Yno Posts: 529
    I have had my XL for almost two years and love it! I am still learning, but I really like to experiment. I have been lurking on this forum since a few months before I bought the Egg, so I felt like i had a bit of a head start. I don't think there is anything you can't cook on the Egg, or at least nothing that I would eat. I have done lots of stuff from appetizers to desserts, and when I throw a party, everyone raves. I have learned a lot from this forum, and from a few books, and from a couple of Eggfests. Welcome to the fin!
    XL BGE in San Jose, CA. Also a Pit Barrel Cooker, a Cal Flame P4 gasser, and lots of toys including the first ever Flame Boss 300 in the wild. And a new Flame Boss 500.
  • blasting
    blasting Posts: 6,262

    Welcome.  Jump into the forum as much as you can.  You'll be the Gordon Ramsey of your patio in no time.

    Phoenix 
  • Theophan
    Theophan Posts: 2,656
    Sarends said:
    ...  Spratchcock chicken - just so so - kinda grossed me out for some reason. 
    First, CONGRATULATIONS on going from "not a cook" to cooking wonderful, even unbelievable" stuff on your Big Green Egg!  Not surprised, because I LOVE cooking on my Eggs, but I loved cooking even before I got them.  Great job!

    Second, the spatchcock should have been every bit as good as the boneless, skinless chicken breasts, and the point there is that it's a learning opportunity! Please don't just decide you don't like a spatchcocked roast chicken and never try it again, but try to sort out what it was more precisely that you didn't like, and learn from that.  EVERYBODY messes stuff up, sometimes -- I am less expert than many, here, and I most definitely have, but learning from the mistakes just keeps making everything better and better!

    On that line, you might find it useful to keep a log of some sort of what went well, what didn't go so well, how you did it, etc..  I do this very much less than I used to, but it was REALLY helpful especially when I began to be able to refer back to how I cooked something last time, and what went well or not so well, and what thoughts did I have for what to do next time.

    The three most typical complaints about chicken are either:
    • Underdone: moist but sort of an unpleasant, rubbery sort of moistness.
    • Overdone: dry, tough.
    • Skin not crisp
    Sometimes it can be a little tricky to get the dark meat done enough without getting the light meat overdone, so maybe if you weren't crazy about the spatchcock chicken, stick to just breasts or just thighs for a while.  If you have a good instant-read thermometer that will help (most folks here love Thermapens -- I'm one of them.  They're quite expensive, but really good).  I like chicken legs at least 165° or 170°, but white meat can be starting to get overdone at the same temperatures.  The thing to do is to measure the temperature and then see how YOU like it, and cook it the way YOU like it, regardless of what somebody else may prefer.  (My wife prefers chicken more done than I do, for example.)

    You've already done GREAT!  It's just going to keep getting better!
  • THEBuckeye
    THEBuckeye Posts: 4,232
    Don't quit on Spatch. The Egg does chicken almost better than anything. 

    @Theophan gave good advice except most say get dark to 180 and breasts to 160. 
    New Albany, Ohio 

  • SamIAm2
    SamIAm2 Posts: 2,007
    edited October 2017
    The Naked Whiz has a site you may also want to explore. Here is how he does Spatch. http://www.nakedwhiz.com/spatch.htm.  Edit- he has recipes also:http://www.nakedwhiz.com/recipes.htm
    Ubi panis, ibi patria.
    Large - Roswell rig, MiniMax-PS Woo; Cocoa, Fl.
  • johnnyp
    johnnyp Posts: 3,932
    Welcome and enjoy the journey  
    XL & MM BGE, 36" Blackstone - Newport News, VA