- Toasted Bun
- Mayo
- Sliced turkey ham
- Ketchup
- Burger over open coals with hickory wood
- Cheddar Cheese
- Burger repeat
- Pickles
- Ketchup
- Bacon
- Chili pepper
- S&P
- Bun
Showing posts with label BBQ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBQ. Show all posts
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Burger, you tasty little thang
From the bottom up:
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Monday, July 13, 2009
Yummy ribs, I must write down the recipe.....
I accidentally cooked some of the best ribs I've ever cooked this weekend. I say accidentally cause I didn't plan it, kinda half-assed monitored them, didn't use all my "tricks", tried a few things new and after it's all over.... I really should document what I do. Cause when you pull them off the grill and you get this remaining there, you know they're gonna be good:
Here they are plated. Those are onion rings from a home grown onion and our super special recipe. Nothing beats fresh deep fried!

Baby Back ribs, not country style or spare ribs. Baby backs are better meat, a more consistent row of meat, and tend to be more dark meat
Start them in the oven. Sure, you can do it on the grill, but you gotta be able to control the temperature. Low and slow. What I can't recall is 170 or 250 degrees.... Or how long. It was hours, was it 4? Or 6? I also blasted it on broil once with the bacon on top for more flavor.
Hold the sauce for now. Sauce has a lot of sugar in it, and sugar burns.
Get the grill ready, get it hot and let the temp drop to 250 or so.
I did dust them with a rub, something I made up a while back and think I wrote down somewhere. Lots of stuff in it.
I also swabbed it with apple sauce after a few hours of cooking.
After another hour or two, I laid a few strips of bacon on it, and one on either side to give it moisture and flavor.
When I put them on the grill, I throw some apple wood on the coals. In this case I used store bought, which is sadly like sawdust, but it smokes well. Other times I've soaked wood chunks.
By the time they're going on the grill, they're practically done, so keep the temperature down and take them off after an hour or so.
Wrapped up in aluminum foil and get the sides ready!
See why I need to write this down?
Here they are plated. Those are onion rings from a home grown onion and our super special recipe. Nothing beats fresh deep fried!
Baby Back ribs, not country style or spare ribs. Baby backs are better meat, a more consistent row of meat, and tend to be more dark meat
Start them in the oven. Sure, you can do it on the grill, but you gotta be able to control the temperature. Low and slow. What I can't recall is 170 or 250 degrees.... Or how long. It was hours, was it 4? Or 6? I also blasted it on broil once with the bacon on top for more flavor.
Hold the sauce for now. Sauce has a lot of sugar in it, and sugar burns.
Get the grill ready, get it hot and let the temp drop to 250 or so.
I did dust them with a rub, something I made up a while back and think I wrote down somewhere. Lots of stuff in it.
I also swabbed it with apple sauce after a few hours of cooking.
After another hour or two, I laid a few strips of bacon on it, and one on either side to give it moisture and flavor.
When I put them on the grill, I throw some apple wood on the coals. In this case I used store bought, which is sadly like sawdust, but it smokes well. Other times I've soaked wood chunks.
By the time they're going on the grill, they're practically done, so keep the temperature down and take them off after an hour or so.
Wrapped up in aluminum foil and get the sides ready!
See why I need to write this down?
Monday, May 26, 2008
Brisket leftovers - Z-Man sammiches
The main reason we cook brisket is to make Z-Man's, a sammich from Oklahoma Joe's in Kansas City. Pictures speak for themselves, tasty! Brisket, BBQ sauce, Provolone cheese (though we used Havarti this time) and onion rings all on a thick soft bun.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
The Great Brisket Project 2008 Part II
Ah, it was a good one. Tracy claimed it was the best one yet. Here it is on the grill after about 4 hours:

Getting ready to pull it off, fork tender! It was on for about 8 hours, I used a remote digital thermometer until it got to about 188 degrees, fire was in the 250-300 degrees for most of the time.
It sat wrapped in foil for about 30 minutes before I cut it up. It was super moist and literally fell apart:

Getting ready to pull it off, fork tender! It was on for about 8 hours, I used a remote digital thermometer until it got to about 188 degrees, fire was in the 250-300 degrees for most of the time.
It sat wrapped in foil for about 30 minutes before I cut it up. It was super moist and literally fell apart:Brisket.... Fire stated 7AM!
Using charcoal of course, adding some hickory (thanks Paul) and apple wood (thanks Pa).
Friday, May 23, 2008
The Great Brisket Project 2008 Part I
So it's been awhile since I made a nice falling apart brisket, and despite the crappy cool rainy weather, Memorial Day weekend is a good time. I bought a nine pound chunk (smallest they had) and have cut off about 4 pounds to make fresh ground beef, something Butchy told me about and another project for another day.... maybe tomorrow? I spiced up the bad boy, and have used "the tool" to tenderize it a bit. Spice rubs this time are a combo of KC Cowtown's "The Squeal" rub (kinda sweet, brown sugar a high ingredient; Thanks Joan!) and a semi local (Washington state) Johnny's Seasoning Salt (salty, peppery, garlicky). It'll sit until Sunday morning in the fridge, I hope to get it on bright and early before 8AM to give it a full 10 hours or more. Wish me luck.
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Jack's Stack BBQ ribs to go! And beans! And sauce!
Last week the doorbell rang. UPS had already delivered the one package I was expecting, so who could it be? A neighbor wanting to introduce themselves? NAH!!! It's another package!! My buddy Paul & Libby surprised me with a very unexpected gift from Jack's Stack that made my day (week, month, etc). What better gift to get than FOOD, and food from "home" too! It came packed in dry ice (which I failed to play with before it was gone), and in a nice styrofoam cooler stamped with Jack's Stack on it that certainly will be used a few times, what a bonus!

I expected it to be good, the beans were a no brainer, I've had them there and they're meaty, tangy and how could that get screwed up by time and shipping? The ribs though? I had expectations that they would be decent, but I wasn't sure if having them cooked, frozen and heated back up if they would be dry, plus I am picky about my ribs. These had a good chance of being good since they were pork ribs, and spare ribs at that. We ignored the directions about cutting them up in pieces before heating and just put the whole slab on a pan in the convection oven (a wonderful appliance). Tracy made some biscuits are we were set:
The first comment (Tracy) was the smokiness, it definitely had a great smell to it. Sat down and basically used a FORK to split them apart, I could tell they wuz gonna be tender!
Yummy! Look at this rib pull out, Zzzzipppp!!!

I expected it to be good, the beans were a no brainer, I've had them there and they're meaty, tangy and how could that get screwed up by time and shipping? The ribs though? I had expectations that they would be decent, but I wasn't sure if having them cooked, frozen and heated back up if they would be dry, plus I am picky about my ribs. These had a good chance of being good since they were pork ribs, and spare ribs at that. We ignored the directions about cutting them up in pieces before heating and just put the whole slab on a pan in the convection oven (a wonderful appliance). Tracy made some biscuits are we were set:
The first comment (Tracy) was the smokiness, it definitely had a great smell to it. Sat down and basically used a FORK to split them apart, I could tell they wuz gonna be tender!Yummy! Look at this rib pull out, Zzzzipppp!!!
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Labor Day weekend's menu
I'm really really looking forward to Monday. Here's the line up:
All day slow cooked pork ribs
Beer
Onion Rings (big sweet yellow in beer batter)
Baked beans
Beer
Hash Brown casserole
Beer
Banana Berries Foster
What about you?
BTW, anyone have any idea what "Santa Barbara Style" means buying pork ribs? Same company, I had the choice of "Pork Spare Ribs Santa Barbara Style" for $2.49 or for 50 cents more, "Pork Spare Ribs Baby Back". They looked the same, I opted for cheaper.
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Brisket's "tough" to cook... Get it?
Brisket is worldly known as the toughest cut of meat to cook, and I know why. More than once I've had disastrous results where it turned out just dang chewy. Shoe leather. Beef Jerky. Rubber. I was pretty disillusioned the first time I tried it last summer, it literally FELL apart when I cut it, and man was it tasty. EASY right? And I didn't DO anything. I thought others brisket was often plain, so I spiced it up a bit with off the shelf BBQ rubs, and I swabbed it in Maple Syrup cause I thought that would give it a nice sweet crispy crust. I didn't monitor my temperature much, kept it at around 225-250 like I do my pulled pork, but I never measured the temp of the meat, I just let it ride. And it was great! But the next time I tried to duplicate it, Ew. Call for pizza.

So what went wrong? I can only think I got lucky the first time, and a few mixed times after that. The times in between were what was frustrating. For this adventure, I did a little research. And it turns out SO easy and explainable. Seems like it's a fairly well accepted fact that brisket meat needs to hit 185-190 degrees so that the fat breaks down and makes it really tender. Mine had been on there for about 8-9 hours, the grill temp pretty steady at 250. I was worried though cause the chunk of brisket was looking black and felt pretty hard when I poked it, meaning NOT tender. It looked done, it looked OVER done. Matter of fact, I *know* it was done and almost screwed it all up by yanking it off and taking it inside to sit.
Instead, I did the right thing and took it's temp. Hmmm. 160. That's not good. The coals had gone down a bit, flirting with 200, so I had to stir the coals and add more wood (I use apple and hickory by the way) and charcoal. I got the temp back up and had some patience (where I got that, who knows) and at about 190, I took the lump of dark meat off and on a plate and in to sit, wrapped in foil. Everyone KNOWS you have to do this. (Note 1). 20-30 minutes later, I was slicing about the best brisket I've ever had! It was hard to tell the difference between pulled pork and this. And tasty tasty. Tracy says she hates brisket, but this time she was raving. We simply had it on buns, and I like a little extra spice rub to sprinkle.
When I cook a big hunk of meat, I like to think ahead on what's going to happen to the leftovers. In brisket's case, we're copying a sammich we love from a great Kansas City BBQ joint called Oklahoma Joe's. The sammich is a Z-Man, made up of sliced brisket, a coupla fried onion rings covered with a slice of Provolone cheese, a dab of sweet BBQ sauce all on a Kaiser bun. To cut slice brisket properly, ya gotta do it "against the grain" and use a meat slicer. Thanks to Ray and Becky's housewarming gift, we have one! Onion rings in beer batter, and french fries double fried (fry, sit, fry).

Note 1: You really do! If you cut a piece of meat right after it's left the heat, the juices will run right out. If it sits a bit, they are drawn back in, making a moister more tender meat.
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