My mouth's watering alright especially after your post.
At the risk of coming off like an obnoxious A-hole, I absolutely MUST chime in on this topic.Barbeque is a religion and I am a disciple of charcoal. Hardwood, natural charcoal. And wood. If you want to "cook" i.e. grill anything, use charcoal and a liberal amount of hickory or mesquite wood chips/chunks. If you want to go to the mountain top and witness the very face of God, use a combination of oak and apple, or another fruitwood to SMOKE your meat. When you put homemade dry rub on a pork shoulder (I have my own proprietary blend) and let it marinate overnight---and then spend the next 7-10 hours lovingly tending to a wood fire that is producing a cooking temperature of roughly 225-250 degrees, you yield a product that will make a blind man see again. As you tear into that crispy crust and witness the pink "smoke ring" on that pork, you wouldn't trade the experience for all the propane in the world.Don't get me wrong--propane grilling is fine for the experience alone. It's very convenient and relatively clean, but it is exactly like having a gas range outside. If you want to experience meat the way God himself intended--use charcoal, or better yet, smoke it.Amen.You may all now go in peace.
--propane grilling is exactly like having a gas range outside.
Quote from: NotoriousSEG on May 26, 2008, 11:40:36 PMAt the risk of coming off like an obnoxious A-hole, I absolutely MUST chime in on this topic.Barbeque is a religion and I am a disciple of charcoal. Hardwood, natural charcoal. And wood. If you want to "cook" i.e. grill anything, use charcoal and a liberal amount of hickory or mesquite wood chips/chunks. If you want to go to the mountain top and witness the very face of God, use a combination of oak and apple, or another fruitwood to SMOKE your meat. When you put homemade dry rub on a pork shoulder (I have my own proprietary blend) and let it marinate overnight---and then spend the next 7-10 hours lovingly tending to a wood fire that is producing a cooking temperature of roughly 225-250 degrees, you yield a product that will make a blind man see again. As you tear into that crispy crust and witness the pink "smoke ring" on that pork, you wouldn't trade the experience for all the propane in the world.Don't get me wrong--propane grilling is fine for the experience alone. It's very convenient and relatively clean, but it is exactly like having a gas range outside. If you want to experience meat the way God himself intended--use charcoal, or better yet, smoke it.Amen.You may all now go in peace.I couldn't have said it any better.... I'm even getting a little misty right now...
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