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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On 8/13/2014 10:05 AM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 07:41:04 -0600, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote: You post pictures of all the objects you are proud of, including your wife. But I see none of that twin screw whatever it is, or your countenance. It doesn't take a shrink to figure that out. === The closest Harry has been to a twin screw is his two bankruptcies and the creditors left in his wake. LOL! He really is something huh.. Owes people money but brags about his Apple overprices junk, clothes, cars, boats... while the people he stole from struggle to make up for his crimes, and his no class wife goes right along with it... What a couple of pieces of ****... |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
"F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 8/13/14, 1:08 AM, Califbill wrote: wrote: On Tue, 12 Aug 2014 11:54:15 -0500, Califbill wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote: What? Water turns to steam at the same temp in Florida as it does up north? Amazing! Depends where up north. Yup with "up" being the operative word. It will be 205 on a mountain in North Carolina, around 200f in Denver and ~187 on the top of the mountain in Jackson. Harry is a liberal arts major. Probably never had to take science courses. D'oh. You still don't know what comprises the "liberal arts." Ignorant ass. Water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit at sea level, whether you are in Florida, Ocean City, Maryland, or on the beach in Milford, Connecticut. As I said, where up north. Not a lot of mountain in Florida, but up north, there are. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 07:41:04 -0600, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote: You post pictures of all the objects you are proud of, including your wife. But I see none of that twin screw whatever it is, or your countenance. It doesn't take a shrink to figure that out. === The closest Harry has been to a twin screw is his two bankruptcies and the creditors left in his wake. Nice! |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
KC wrote:
On 8/13/2014 10:05 AM, Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 07:41:04 -0600, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote: You post pictures of all the objects you are proud of, including your wife. But I see none of that twin screw whatever it is, or your countenance. It doesn't take a shrink to figure that out. === The closest Harry has been to a twin screw is his two bankruptcies and the creditors left in his wake. LOL! He really is something huh.. Owes people money but brags about his Apple overprices junk, clothes, cars, boats... while the people he stole from struggle to make up for his crimes, and his no class wife goes right along with it... What a couple of pieces of ****... No response = admission of guilt. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 00:08:37 -0500, Califbill wrote:
wrote: On Tue, 12 Aug 2014 20:31:57 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 12 Aug 2014 19:47:34 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 12 Aug 2014 16:11:38 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Sun, 10 Aug 2014 23:13:13 -0400, wrote: I have a Brinkman smoker the shed but it is such a PITA to clean I seldom use it Clean? Do you mean the racks and water pan? Are you talking about one of these? http://tinyurl.com/lltv5bk I don't think they're much of a hassle. I clean the racks and pan whenever I'm ready to smoke something, and just carry the meat out on the racks. Haven't gotten any food poisoning yet. I guess I don't like to store them with bits of meat on them. I also like to get most of the crud out of the can itself. I've not noticed any crud in the can itself. Maybe I just try to keep my meat centered a bit more. I seem to get a greasy smoky coating on the inside that smells up wherever I keep it. I have one of these. http://www.lowes.com/pd_551862-451-1...&kpid=50213399 Nice. I've often thought of getting one, but have been satisfied enough with the Brinkman that I've not done so. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On Monday, August 11, 2014 9:53:14 AM UTC-4, Tim wrote:
One small advantage I have concerning grill cooking is by having an old farm is having an abundance of good flavor woods like Apple, wild cherry, plumb, hickory, pear, persimmon, and grape. There's a local that cherry smokes jam for the local Lions club fund raiser. Just talking with him I offered to donate some cherry. He thought that was generous and told him to bring his pick up and I'd fix him right up. A couple weeks ago he went away with a heaping pick up full of cured wild cherry. Good wood for a good cause. While at Gettysburg this past week a friend mentioned he had some cherry he'd brought to use as firewood. I traded him a some oak for the cherry. Will cut the cherry up for the smoker. Can't wait to try it. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On Tuesday, August 12, 2014 8:21:09 PM UTC-4, Earl wrote:
KC wrote: On 8/11/2014 8:25 PM, Earl wrote: KC wrote: They do if you mix in wet Hickory chips... No need for them to be wet. Hummm, not sure why I soak them, prolly cause grandpa' did. You want to get as much smoke into the meat as early as possible. Once it's "sealed" the benefit is diminished. There are also discussions that wet smoking woods add a bitter taste. I smoke the hell out of brisket and pork shoulders immediately and never add any more for the 12-16 hour process. Please expand on that brisket smoking technique. I've not tried one yet, but keep thinking about it when I see those beautiful briskets at Costco. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 00:08:37 -0500, Califbill wrote:
Earl wrote: Califbill wrote: wrote: On Mon, 11 Aug 2014 20:27:44 -0400, KC wrote: No need for them to be wet. Hummm, not sure why I soak them, prolly cause grandpa' did. They don't catch on fire quite as fast. They smoke better. As to cleaning the smoke chamber of the Brinkman, I shoot some starter in to the area and burn off the grease, It will smoke longer, not better. They smoke instead of flame. One advantage to the electric burner is the lack of flame. The chips go in a pan which sits on the burner. Lots of smoke, but no flame. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 07:41:04 -0600, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 8/13/2014 5:52 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 8/12/14, 8:18 PM, KC wrote: On 8/12/2014 8:03 PM, wrote: On Tue, 12 Aug 2014 17:01:15 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 8/11/14, 10:19 AM, wrote: On Mon, 11 Aug 2014 08:59:43 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: I suppose if you fellas don't like the taste of the meat you are cooking, all the effort to change its basic flavor is worth the effort. :) I am surprised a lefty like you does not understand the history and tradition of soul food. This is the trick of turning less than desirable cuts of meat into a totally different taste sensation. I guess that is what happens when a liberal seldom actually gets out of his limousine Oh. I thought it was a way to conceal you were eating fatty food and adding carcinogens to them. Who started this thread, anyway, some dork who couldn't spell pork? Waaaaahhhh, what a ****in' pussy.... Holy ****, you have more chins than the Mormon Tabernacle Chior... so don't be talking to us about how we eat.. LOL! You really are an ignorant ass. You've never seen me, you've never even seen a photo of me, and you have no idea what I look like. You, on the other hand, have your photos pasted all over Facebook and what you look like most of all is an unkempt little troll who is aging badly, with scraggly hair, a bad complexion, and raggedy clothes. You look like one of the homeless souls who hawks newspapers in the morning on the busy street corners in Washington, D.C. Actually, you don't. Those poor fellows have jobs. You can't get a job. You post pictures of all the objects you are proud of, including your wife. But I see none of that twin screw whatever it is, or your countenance. It doesn't take a shrink to figure that out. I've seen him. He has no business putting down the physique of anyone. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
John H wrote:
On Tuesday, August 12, 2014 8:21:09 PM UTC-4, Earl wrote: KC wrote: On 8/11/2014 8:25 PM, Earl wrote: KC wrote: They do if you mix in wet Hickory chips... No need for them to be wet. Hummm, not sure why I soak them, prolly cause grandpa' did. You want to get as much smoke into the meat as early as possible. Once it's "sealed" the benefit is diminished. There are also discussions that wet smoking woods add a bitter taste. I smoke the hell out of brisket and pork shoulders immediately and never add any more for the 12-16 hour process. Please expand on that brisket smoking technique. I've not tried one yet, but keep thinking about it when I see those beautiful briskets at Costco. There's very good info he http://virtualweberbullet.com/brisket2.html |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
When I was a kid my grandma had a jar full of 'wooden nickels' that the grocery store would give to kids...
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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 20:28:50 -0400, Earl wrote:
John H wrote: On Tuesday, August 12, 2014 8:21:09 PM UTC-4, Earl wrote: KC wrote: On 8/11/2014 8:25 PM, Earl wrote: KC wrote: They do if you mix in wet Hickory chips... No need for them to be wet. Hummm, not sure why I soak them, prolly cause grandpa' did. You want to get as much smoke into the meat as early as possible. Once it's "sealed" the benefit is diminished. There are also discussions that wet smoking woods add a bitter taste. I smoke the hell out of brisket and pork shoulders immediately and never add any more for the 12-16 hour process. Please expand on that brisket smoking technique. I've not tried one yet, but keep thinking about it when I see those beautiful briskets at Costco. There's very good info he http://virtualweberbullet.com/brisket2.html Thanks, Earl...one of the links found there also had some good info. http://virtualweberbullet.com/brisketselect.html Going to Costco today to get a brisket. Now I have to decide between oak or cherry for smoking. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 11:33:00 -0400, wrote:
On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 09:49:59 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 00:29:19 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 21:10:53 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 19:47:52 -0400, wrote: I do have a controller I salvaged out of an old cook top but I never got around to hooking it up. === I just listed an even dozen of Round Tuits on EBAY - factory fresh in original packaging, free shipping. Value? Priceless. I have a case of them here somewhere, probably out in the garage next to the burner controllers If the burner controllers are taking up too much space, you can send one this way when you get round tuit. (Oooops...spell checker wants to changer 'tuit' to 'tit'.) Email me your address On the way, over. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
Yes Greg, they were quite common I the day but the neat thing about them was the stores ( now defunct) had their name and slogans on one side and a huge 5c stamped on the other. And if you saved up some 'wooden nickels' you could redeem them for an ice cream cone or some other treat. Bar tokens- same idea...
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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On 8/19/2014 11:33 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 09:49:59 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 00:29:19 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 21:10:53 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 19:47:52 -0400, wrote: I do have a controller I salvaged out of an old cook top but I never got around to hooking it up. === I just listed an even dozen of Round Tuits on EBAY - factory fresh in original packaging, free shipping. Value? Priceless. I have a case of them here somewhere, probably out in the garage next to the burner controllers If the burner controllers are taking up too much space, you can send one this way when you get round tuit. (Oooops...spell checker wants to changer 'tuit' to 'tit'.) Email me your address Hey, got another one of those?? |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On 8/19/2014 11:30 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 09:38:43 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 19:47:52 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 13:31:22 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: One advantage to the electric burner is the lack of flame. The chips go in a pan which sits on the burner. Lots of smoke, but no flame. That is how my Brinkman works. I really need to put a controller on the element tho. It runs a bit hot for a smoker. If you really have it packed, like 3 racks of ribs and a butt or two it is better than just a rack. I do have a controller I salvaged out of an old cook top but I never got around to hooking it up. I've thought about just replacing the element with a single burner electric stove to better control the heat. I'm with you in thinking the Brinkman gets too hot. Thought of drilling some holes in the top and putting some bolts therein, then taking out a bolt or two to release some heat. Problem is...the smoke would go too. Any other ideas? My thinking is If I put this control in a handy box with a cord and receptacle, I don't need to modify the smoker at all. When you get it figured out, mind sending me a quick drawing. I would like to try this too... |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On 8/20/2014 12:05 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 20 Aug 2014 11:37:28 -0400, KC wrote: On 8/19/2014 11:33 AM, wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 09:49:59 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 00:29:19 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 21:10:53 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 19:47:52 -0400, wrote: I do have a controller I salvaged out of an old cook top but I never got around to hooking it up. === I just listed an even dozen of Round Tuits on EBAY - factory fresh in original packaging, free shipping. Value? Priceless. I have a case of them here somewhere, probably out in the garage next to the burner controllers If the burner controllers are taking up too much space, you can send one this way when you get round tuit. (Oooops...spell checker wants to changer 'tuit' to 'tit'.) Email me your address Hey, got another one of those?? I am going to check out the idea to be sure a 240v controller works OK on 120v. I will put you in the queue if it does. I have 4 Thanks.. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On 8/20/2014 12:05 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 20 Aug 2014 11:37:28 -0400, KC wrote: On 8/19/2014 11:33 AM, wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 09:49:59 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 00:29:19 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 21:10:53 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 19:47:52 -0400, wrote: I do have a controller I salvaged out of an old cook top but I never got around to hooking it up. === I just listed an even dozen of Round Tuits on EBAY - factory fresh in original packaging, free shipping. Value? Priceless. I have a case of them here somewhere, probably out in the garage next to the burner controllers If the burner controllers are taking up too much space, you can send one this way when you get round tuit. (Oooops...spell checker wants to changer 'tuit' to 'tit'.) Email me your address Hey, got another one of those?? I am going to check out the idea to be sure a 240v controller works OK on 120v. I will put you in the queue if it does. I have 4 Thanks, and either way, I would still like to see a sketch if you get time someday. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On 8/20/2014 12:10 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 20 Aug 2014 11:38:20 -0400, KC wrote: On 8/19/2014 11:30 AM, wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 09:38:43 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 19:47:52 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 13:31:22 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: One advantage to the electric burner is the lack of flame. The chips go in a pan which sits on the burner. Lots of smoke, but no flame. That is how my Brinkman works. I really need to put a controller on the element tho. It runs a bit hot for a smoker. If you really have it packed, like 3 racks of ribs and a butt or two it is better than just a rack. I do have a controller I salvaged out of an old cook top but I never got around to hooking it up. I've thought about just replacing the element with a single burner electric stove to better control the heat. I'm with you in thinking the Brinkman gets too hot. Thought of drilling some holes in the top and putting some bolts therein, then taking out a bolt or two to release some heat. Problem is...the smoke would go too. Any other ideas? My thinking is If I put this control in a handy box with a cord and receptacle, I don't need to modify the smoker at all. When you get it figured out, mind sending me a quick drawing. I would like to try this too... It is pretty simple. The controller has L1&L2 "in" terminals and H1&H2 "out" terminals. (plus one for the indicator light) There may be 2 problems. 1. will it cycle right on 120v 2., will it handle the 1600W element in a Brinkman I still have my boat on the trailer doing my 500-600 hour service and that is more important to me. ;-) No hurry, whenever you get it sorted out let us know. Me too, getting ready for a huge event this weekend... |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
On 8/20/2014 12:13 PM, KC wrote:
On 8/20/2014 12:10 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Aug 2014 11:38:20 -0400, KC wrote: On 8/19/2014 11:30 AM, wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2014 09:38:43 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 19:47:52 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 13:31:22 -0400, Poco Loco wrote: One advantage to the electric burner is the lack of flame. The chips go in a pan which sits on the burner. Lots of smoke, but no flame. That is how my Brinkman works. I really need to put a controller on the element tho. It runs a bit hot for a smoker. If you really have it packed, like 3 racks of ribs and a butt or two it is better than just a rack. I do have a controller I salvaged out of an old cook top but I never got around to hooking it up. I've thought about just replacing the element with a single burner electric stove to better control the heat. I'm with you in thinking the Brinkman gets too hot. Thought of drilling some holes in the top and putting some bolts therein, then taking out a bolt or two to release some heat. Problem is...the smoke would go too. Any other ideas? My thinking is If I put this control in a handy box with a cord and receptacle, I don't need to modify the smoker at all. When you get it figured out, mind sending me a quick drawing. I would like to try this too... It is pretty simple. The controller has L1&L2 "in" terminals and H1&H2 "out" terminals. (plus one for the indicator light) There may be 2 problems. 1. will it cycle right on 120v 2., will it handle the 1600W element in a Brinkman I still have my boat on the trailer doing my 500-600 hour service and that is more important to me. ;-) No hurry, whenever you get it sorted out let us know. Me too, getting ready for a huge event this weekend... Speaking of huge event. You must see the Medora Musical while you are job hunting in North Dakota. -- "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them". Thomas Jefferson |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
FunnyMan says..
" Speaking of huge event. You must see the Medora Musical while you are job hunting in North Dakota. " Don't say that...he'll run helter skelter in the opposite direction. |
Pulled Pord - Here it is!
Hey FOAD! and any other bitch with code names....WHY don't you get a job and take care of your family instead of **** around on the internet and Jack up families!
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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
So Stacey, Tony or any other home wreckers out there....U should start my getting a life that's of value and honor instead of playing **** games behind a computer screen...
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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
Again... so Stacey, Tony and any other POS out there that thinks it's ok to wreck families....you should try looking up the meaning of "value and honor"instead of playing **** games behind a computer screen!...further more, deleting posts cause your busted is a great big post of GUILT !! Now watch this earthquake!
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Pulled Pord - Here it is!
Poco Loco wrote:
On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 20:28:50 -0400, Earl wrote: John H wrote: On Tuesday, August 12, 2014 8:21:09 PM UTC-4, Earl wrote: KC wrote: On 8/11/2014 8:25 PM, Earl wrote: KC wrote: They do if you mix in wet Hickory chips... No need for them to be wet. Hummm, not sure why I soak them, prolly cause grandpa' did. You want to get as much smoke into the meat as early as possible. Once it's "sealed" the benefit is diminished. There are also discussions that wet smoking woods add a bitter taste. I smoke the hell out of brisket and pork shoulders immediately and never add any more for the 12-16 hour process. Please expand on that brisket smoking technique. I've not tried one yet, but keep thinking about it when I see those beautiful briskets at Costco. There's very good info he http://virtualweberbullet.com/brisket2.html Thanks, Earl...one of the links found there also had some good info. http://virtualweberbullet.com/brisketselect.html Going to Costco today to get a brisket. Now I have to decide between oak or cherry for smoking. Here's my late response... 2/3 Hickory and 1/3 Cherry (or similar) for brisket. Works great for me. |
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