Sunday, May 18, 2008

Who wants to smoke my meat?

Early last year, I was mildly obsessed about where best to find great barbecue in both the Twin Cities and greater Minnesota. Frankly, it was starting to get expensive to drive nearly 100 miles south to Austin to eat with friends and a friend's barbecue restaurant. Don't get me wrong; his restaurant, Piggy Blues BBQ, is heads and tails above anything I've ever eaten. And if you ask me "Why don't you go to Famous Dave's?" I will surely respond by saying "Famous Dave's is to BBQ what Taco Bell is to Mexican food. I'd sooner eat McDonald's for a week."

It was about 13 months ago, thought, that my wife came through big time with a smoker for my birthday. Sure, others would ask for a flat-screen TV or an XBox 360 but mine is the gift that keeps on giving. In fact, it seems to give about once a month.


Saturday was one of those giving days. After testing a cut of pork I grabbed at the cesspool of all supermarkets; Cub Foods; a few months ago in the crock pot in April, I was ready for the smoker.
I'll spare you a lot of the details but I will say that I had the fire going by 11:00 AM and that the dry rub consisting simply of black pepper, chili powder and red pepper flakes stuck nicely to the mustard I slathered on to the pork.

Don't worry, the mustard's flavor vanishes and leaves the dark skin which seals in the flavor and juices. All told, I pulled the roast from the smoker around 6:30 PM after slow roasting over both traditional charcoal and wood lump charcoal at around 250 degrees while adding in a few chunks of Mesquite for smoky flavor.

I am slowly perfecting it and it's becoming a decent substitute for my friend's distant restaurant. What other summer delights should I try? Either on the smoker or the grill.

14 comments:

The Future Was Yesterday said...

I don't know if this is true or not, since I still don't have the smoker of my dreams (as my tears of self pity run down your screen in rivers), but I was told never smoke fish in a smoker you ever want to use for anything else.

Apparently, everything comes out smelling, and tasting, fishy.

The Future Was Yesterday said...

"Who wants to smoke my meat? "
Any number of Republicans!:) Sorry for the double, but just HAD to get that in.:P

Anonymous said...

Try boiling off some ribs for a little bit then finish off on your smoker, I hear that is delicious of course then you have to enjoy that with your local piggy blues dirty rice.

Sandy said...

i hate smoker. i love it spicy and grilled

Ed & Jeanne said...

I HATE reading food posts that look good when I haven't even had lunch yet.

Ginormous Boobs said...

I have wanted a smoker forever. Too bad I live with a vegetarian and a girl who only eats raw food (no meat, just beans, grains, fruits and veggies). UGH!

Anonymous said...

Oh my. 10am and I must run out and buy a smoker this instant!

Anonymous said...

crap, my hand slipped and I hit "enter" before filling out all the fields & finishing my comment. Pork for breakfast, it's a beautiful thing!

For Ginormous, one of my best friends from childhood makes & sells raw chocolate on her website. It's really good. Not as good as a hunk of smoked meat but might take the edge off:

http://www.vt-fiddle.com/rawfood/my_raw_food_treats.php

or if that link is too long:
http://tinyurl.com/3zocfg

Tanya Kristine said...

Hey dude~~~ looks like we blogged almost similar...pertty neat!

Ginormous Boobs said...

Spleeness: Thanks for the links! About the only raw food item i do like is the chocolate.

Sornie said...

Can chocolate be considered food? If so, which of the food trapezoids does it fit in?

ginger b said...

I don't know what else you should try.

I now know what the hell I am going to try though...

Whiskeymarie said...

Brined and smoked chicken.
So. Good.

Try smoking tomatoes sometime too- they're good on salads, or smooshed up and added to sauces. They don't need a ton of smoke time, but soooo delicious.

OctaneBoy said...

Welcome to the smoke, it's a glorious summer ritual. For me the big three are briskit, spareribs and pork shoulder for pulled sandwiches.