Thursday, 8 December 2011

Making the Perfect Brisket

!±8± Making the Perfect Brisket

When a Texan says barbecue, they aren't talking pork. They may be referring to cabrito, but more than likely you're going to be eating beef. Barbecue to a Texan really means brisket. This is one of the toughest, leatheriest, most difficult to cook cuts on a cow because the brisket is a muscle used for walking, which is pretty much all a cow does other than eat and burp. But, when combined with the magic of a long and low cooking, this piece of leather can be transformed into a piece of meat that creates a lifelong addiction for more and better.

Selecting a brisket is about more than just skill. It is about 80% luck since most briskets arrive at the butcher vacuum-sealed, which sometimes makes it difficult to determine what you are getting. Since brisket isn't well known here in Eastern Canada, it took quite a bit of time, along with some begging and bribery, to find a butcher who could provide me with briskets that weren't packed.

A brisket is essentially divided into two cuts otherwise known as the point and the flat, with one side having almost no fat on it. With this side facing down, the flat is on the bottom and the point is facing up, towards the high end of the brisket. The flat cut is the most versatile piece of the brisket as it is used readily in both chopped and sliced applications, whereas the point tends to be used more often as a chopped brisket because it contains more connective tissue than the flat, which breaks down during the cooking process making the point more prone to fall apart rather than slice.

The difficulty with the two cuts is that when in a full piece the grains run perpendicular to one another making them difficult to slice. You can sometimes purchase the two cuts separately, but for barbecue you want to obtain the whole brisket, in one full piece, with a nice one-quarter to one-third of an inch fat cap. Briskets like this are is sometimes referred to as a "Packers Cut" or "deckle-off boneless". Your butcher is far more likely to know the term "Packers Cut", simply because most of them looked at me like I had lost my mind when I said "deckle". Once the brisket is cooked, you will then separate the two cuts to eliminate the perpendicular grain.

While the fat cap does serve an important role in keeping the meat moist, the marbling of the meat is by and far the most important component in producing a tender and moist brisket. Choose a brisket that has slender and consistent streaks of marbling throughout the meat. You don't want it all clumped in one area, or the marbling so thick that it goes over the line into just plain fatty. Too much fat, and you end up with a greasy mess - not enough, and it is dry as a bone. It's all about balance when it comes to brisket.

Once you've found a piece with great marbling, the next thing you should look at is the size. A bigger brisket requires far more effort to become tender than a smaller brisket - if it ever does. Reason being, the bigger brisket comes from an older cow, which translates into a tougher product. My preferred choice for weight is somewhere in the 7 - 10 pound range. Also worth considering with regards to size, is the thickness of the cut. Most briskets will tend to taper off into a thin end piece, but if at all possible try to get a brisket with an even thickness. This helps to ensure that your brisket will cook evenly.

Something else to consider when picking a brisket is its flexibility. If you center it in your hand, it should drape over your hand and not remain stiff. If it remains stiff that is probably an indication it is going to be a bit tough. There are no guarantees when it comes to brisket, but a softer piece of meat tends to produce a tenderer product - just think tenderloin.

Finally, as with any food, make sure the meat is attractive and safe. It should be firm, with a fresh beefy smell, a nice deep red color, and it should have been stored at proper temperatures at all times.
Brisket can be purchased and frozen for later use, just make sure to take it out a day or so ahead and keep it in the refrigerator to defrost. An eight pound brisket will take somewhere between 24 and 36 hours to defrost in your refrigerator. Remember, failing to keep the brisket at proper temperatures (between 34F and 39F) during the defrosting process can result in spoilage and illness.

A day ahead of cooking, remove the brisket from its packaging and place the brisket with the fat cap facing down on your cutting board. Using a sharp filet or meat knife, begin to remove the thick, yellowish fat from the flat. Next begin working the thick strip of fat that separates the point and the flat, removing the excess leaving only a thin layer of fat between the two cuts. This layer keeps your brisket moist as well, but not trimming only serves to leave it greasy and fatty. Finally, take a look at the fat cap and make sure it is evenly thick across the brisket, trimming any thicker parts to match.

One thing I have learned is that it can be next to impossible to tell which way the grain runs once the meat has cooked, so it is a pretty good idea to cut a piece against the grain just to identify how to cut it once cooked.

Here comes my favorite part - seasoning the brisket. Once the meat has been trimmed, rinse it with running water, thoroughly dry it with paper towels, and place on enough plastic wrap to cover (but don't cover it yet!). Next, take a cup of mustard, 1/4 cup of your favorite dry rub (I'm partial to Caroline's Rub), 1/8 cup ground horseradish, and combine to form a paste. Using a brush, paint the brisket with the paste to thoroughly coat the meat. This paste will add a bit of a zing to your bark, help to protect from additional moisture loss, and hold the dry rub to the meat. Some may argue that the vinegar in the mustard also helps to tenderize, but I agree only to a very limited degree. While it does help to tenderize the very exterior, it does not have much affect on the tenderness below the surface of the meat. Again, another reason why marbling is so important.

Once nicely coated, wrap the meat tightly in the plastic wrap, making sure there are no air leaks or holes. Put in the refrigerator and let sit overnight. When ready to cook it, remove the brisket from the refrigerator, unwrap, and allow to return to room temperature prior to putting it on your grill or smoker.

Something worth mentioning here is if the rub you choose is high in salt, you increase the loss of moisture. As a natural part of the osmotic process and as a result of the extremely long slow cooking, the salt will leech moisture from the meat. The problem this creates is that the moisture content within the meat is the best conductor of heat. When the heat is conducted evenly throughout the meat, you obviously achieve a more evenly cooked meat - the key here being the outside isn't charcoal by the time the inside is cooked. It is best if your rub is not primarily salt based, or if it is, at the expense of a bit of flavor you can place the brisket on the grill or smoker immediately after seasoning with the rub and mustard paste.

Now that you are ready to cook your brisket, it is time to fire up the smoker. What wood you choose will have a direct impact on the flavor of your brisket. I have to admit that I am partial to a mix of pecan and cherry. The pecan doesn't make its presence as readily known as hickory, and the cherry serves to offer a sweetness that adds a depth to the overall taste, that while familiar to tasters, leaves them wondering just what that little something extra was. Do not place too much emphasis on producing a brisket with a deep 'smoke ring'. The ring of color grading from dark on the outside to a pale pink deeper into the meat is not really a smoke ring at all. It is a chemical reaction of meat's constituents. The depth of color depends more upon the moisture of the meat than upon the density of smoke. It has no bearing on flavor and is not used as a judging criterion in competition.

I have used a variety of smokers to barbecue, including offsets, electric and propane fuelled, water smokers, and even the crock-pot, and of there isn't any single one that I prefer. It totally depends upon my purpose. If I just want to enjoy a lazy day and relax, I will fire up the offset. If I am in a situation where I can't tend to it all day, I will fire up the Cookshack SM050, which is virtually effortless. Both turn out equally delicious products with only subtle differences between them. The key to cooking the brisket is to maintain an even and consistently low temperature throughout the cooking process.

Optimally you would want to see a temperature of no more than 225F for the entire cooking time, which translates to about an hour and a half per pound. I tend to cook my briskets at 215F, which adds a little time to the cooking, but gives a little room for error if the heat gets away from me for a second or two. Once I have gotten the smoker stabilized at my desired temperature, I don't want to lose all of my heat when I open the doors, so an important thing to remember is to have everything ready to go so the doors are only open as long as they have to be. When placing the brisket on the cooker, place it as far away from the source of the heat as possible to allow the meat to cook evenly and slowly. When inserting your thermometer probe, always check the brisket for doneness in the 'flat' and not the 'point'. The 'point' will generally become tender before the flat, which will lead you to believe the brisket is ready, so make sure to continue to cook until the flat is tender.

Mopping a brisket is controversial with many saying never do it, and others at the complete opposite end saying it is not brisket without a mop. I believe it depends on the smoker. While it does add a bit of flavor, a mop more accurately provides a way to maintain moisture so your meat doesn't dry out. If you are using a smoker that has a water bowl or if your smoker tends to have naturally high moisture levels while in use, you may not want to use any kind of mop. Normally with an offset and its much drier heat, you will find improved protection of the moisture levels by using a mop. However, remember, every time you open the smoker you cause the temperature to drop, and in some smokers plummet, which increases your cooking time. Set yourself a strict schedule for mopping and stick to it. I tend to mop no more than once every 2 - 3 hours depending on the brisket.

Internal temperature is key to determining when your brisket is done, so a must-have piece of equipment is a remote thermometer, or at the very least a thermometer with a probe that attaches to a thermometer mounted to the exterior of your smoker (I recommend Polder and Maverick Thermometers). I actually use two - one to monitor the internal temperature of the meat, and one to monitor the internal temp of the smoker simply because most smokers come with highly inaccurate gauges. Insert your meat probe into the thickest part of the flat cut, and place your room temperature, unwrapped brisket on the rack with the fat cap facing up. This will allow the juices to penetrate and surround the meat to help baste it as the fat renders. Close the doors, if necessary plug in your thermometer, and don't disturb the meat for at least 3 hours. I say three hours, because that is sufficient time to allow the crust to develop, which prevents your rub from falling off or washing away should you choose to mop. Nice thing about low and slow barbecue is that sugar burns at 265F, and since you will rarely if ever exceed 240F, you don't have to worry about burning the sugar, butter, or tomato based rubs and mops. When a brisket reaches a temperature of 185 degrees F, most of the fat has melted which begins to really allow you to achieve a tender product, perfect for slicing. If you are trying to achieve the chopped meat consistency, some pit-masters advise taking the brisket and wrapping it in foil at the 185F mark, and returning it to the smoker until the brisket reaches 195F. This is because at about 192F, the collagens that really bind the meat and make it tough, melt and leave you with a brisket that falls apart and becomes more appropriate for chopped brisket sandwiches than slicing. Wrapping the meat in foil will shelter the brisket from taking on any further smoke, keep it moist, and prevent it from completely falling apart when it hits the 192F mark, making it easier to remove from the smoker.

If you have chosen to slice the brisket, remove it at 185F and place it with the fat cap down on your cutting board. This will allow you to find the layer of fat that connects the point and the flat and point. Separate the two muscles to remove the excess fat that runs between them, and to prevent running into the muscles as their grains cross in different directions. The point is going to be a tastier and far more tender piece of meat, but a trade off is it tends to be more fatty than the flat. If your slow and low cooking has been successful in rendering the fat and you started with a larger cut of meat, you should be able to get a few good slices out of the point, which would be the preferred choice for presentation at competition.

Always slice brisket diagonally across the grain, into ¼ inch thick slices. When you hold the slice up and try to pull it apart the slice should have a little resistance before it pulls apart. If it just completely falls apart, you have gone beyond slicing and should reserve the brisket for chopped meat applications, such as sandwiches and baked potato toppings. Remember that brisket begins to dry very quickly after it is cut, so be sure to have everything ready prior to cutting. To aid in protecting the moisture, use any juices that you have left from the slicing to top the brisket prior to sending it off for judging.


Making the Perfect Brisket

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Friday, 2 December 2011

Cookshack Smokette Elite Electric Bbq Smoker

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Sunday, 27 November 2011

Barbecue Smokers

!±8± Barbecue Smokers

As the author of a BBQ book, I get asked all the time... what's the best BBQ smoker to buy? My answer usually leads them in the right direction and gives them a few places to start looking.

I usually tell people about one of the following bbq smokers...

Big Green Egg - this is an insulated vertical smoker. They start around 0 to 0 for the large model.

Traeger Pellet Smokers - This is a nice bbq smoker that burns wood pellets. The Lil' tex starts around 5. The digital controls and oversize hopper are a little extra though.

Char-Broil Silver Smoker - This is a more affordable, smaller offset type smoker but it is well constructed and produces some great Q. They are 9 down at Home Depot.

Stumps Smoker - this is also an insulated vertical smoker with a gravity fed charcoal system. They start around 00.

Lang Smoker - This is a traditional offset type smoker. It is made of good thick metal but it is not insulated. This offset BBQ smoker is unique in that it has a metal plate that runs the full length of the smoker just below the meat grate. The smoke travels all the way to the other end of the smoker, over the meat, and out the smoke stack on the same side as the firebox. The Lang Model 60 starts at 95.

Fast Eddy's by Cookshack - This is a very nice pellet BBQ smoker with a vertical style. Used by many of the top BBQ competition teams. It is around 95.

Southern Yankee - these are rotisserie bbq smokers and they have many models to choose from. They range from small pull behind rotisseries to large concession trailers. They start at 50 and go up from there.

And... their final decision usually has to do with the following factors...

Price - the amount of money you have to spend on a BBQ smoker has a lot to do with your decision. I think the most bang for your buck is the Traeger Lil' Tex BBQ smoker - especially for the back yard BBQer. Although, many BBQ teams use these too. Whatever you do, don't go down to WalMart or Home Depot and buy one of those small offset smokers for 0 or less. They are made out of very thin metal and the fireboxes do not ventilate well. You'll have trouble producing good BBQ on those things.

Work needed - A traditional offset BBQ smoker requires a lot of work tending the fire. Some people prefer a traditional offset smoker over something that burns charcoal, pellets, or propane. But let me warn you... you'll be chopping a lot of wood to feed that hungry beast. You'll need to check your fire in most offset smokers every 15-30 minutes. The Southern Yankee are wood or charcoal burning too. That can get very tiresome on a long overnight smoke. The Big Green Egg and Stumps Smokers will run a very long time on just one bag of charcoal. Of course, the Traeger and Fast Eddy's burn pellets that are fed automatically.

Insulated - The insulated BBQ smoker allows for long burns so you can get a little shut eye on those long overnight brisket smokes. The Big Green Egg and Stumps are insulated and burn charcoal.

Size - Look at how many square inches of cooking space you get for your money. Traeger Lil' Tex's are nice BBQ smokers, but you'll need two or three of them if you intend to compete with them. Of course Traeger has many larger models to choose from including some commercial BBQ smokers.

Wood, pellets, or charcoal - What kind of smoke flavor do you like? Do you like charcoal or real wood? Or maybe a combination of both... usually, if you use charcoal for heat and throw some wood chunks on top for flavor, you'll get a good result. Lump charcoal and Duraflame's hardwood briquettes are other options that produce a cleaner and hotter burn. Of course, wood pellets are real wood and the results are similar to using real wood logs.

Type - You got your vertical smokers, vertical insulated smokers, traditional offset smokers (with the smoke stack opposite from the firebox), Lang offset smokers, pellet smokers, rotisserie smokers, gas smokers, and all kinds of combinations of all of these. What BBQ smoker is best suited to your needs or wants?

Once you decide on what BBQ smoker to get, you'll need to learn how to use it right. A good place to start is to get a copy of "Competition BBQ Secrets" and learn how the pro's do it on the competition BBQ circuit.


Barbecue Smokers

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Wednesday, 26 October 2011

How to Find the Best BBQ Smokers

!±8± How to Find the Best BBQ Smokers

Ceramic smokers observing ancient Japanese design, or handmade smokers by David Klose including custom smokers for cook-offs, are telling of the exciting variety of the best BBQ smokers. They may be electric or gas powered, popularly propane, to provide consistent heat; charcoal or wood fired, whether it's wood chips with flavor or wood pellets for clean, efficient burning.

The best BBQ smokers in the low to mid-price range are made to ease the process for inexperienced and low-commitment barbeque cooks. Bar-B-Chef, Big Drum Smoker, Bradley, Brinkman, Camp Chef, Char-Broil, Char-Griller, Masterbuilt, Old Smokey and Weber's Smokey Mountain offer economical smokers doubling as grills or outdoor ovens, all digital operation, thermostatic switching between hot and cold smoking and the Lazy-Q.

The choicest high-end BBQ smokers assure barbeque aficionados, restaurants, chefs and caterers with uncompromising quality. Big Green Egg, Cookshack, J.R. Enterprises, Lang, Klose, Pitts & Spitts, Super Cajun, The Good One, and Traeger Pellet boast heavy duty smoking chambers that last a lifetime, 4 to 6 grill rack refrigerator style smokers, super precise temperature settings, incredible competition smokers. Buy them built inteo concession stands and trailers and you instantly have mobile carts and roadside diners.

The best BBQ smokers provide a myriad advantages to fit your style. Traditional smoke boxes and offset barrel smokers promise genuine homemade textures while meticulous vertical water smokers and upright drum smokers (UDS) guarantee authentic slow-cooked tenderness. Hardwoods like oak, maple, hickory, alder, mesquite, pecan, black walnut, beech and fruit tree woods like apple, cherry and plum are preferred.


How to Find the Best BBQ Smokers

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Monday, 17 October 2011

Smokenator 2600 Transform Your 26.75 Inch Weber Kettle Into a Smoker

!±8±Smokenator 2600 Transform Your 26.75 Inch Weber Kettle Into a Smoker

Brand : Smokenator
Rate :
Price :
Post Date : Oct 17, 2011 17:19:04
Usually ships in 1-2 business days



Introducing the Smokenator 2600, an innovative BBQ accessory that transforms, your Weber Kettle into a water smoker. It converts your existing 26.75" Weber kettle into a smoker that is more efficient, easier to use and easier to clean up than the traditional vertical water smoker. No hassle with charcoal baskets, rails and aluminum foil and figuring out how to keep water over the coals to add moisture.The Smokenator is an industrial strength product, made out of 18-gage brushed sheet stainless, which won't rust. The whole idea of this product is to provide you with a means and a method to let you control your Weber, to obtain superlative results, while not having to buy a water smoker or other higher priced smoking device. Best of all, because the water pan is located extremely close to the coals, the cooking environment is kept moist. Evaporation tests how 45% less evaporation versus 22% by traditional pan methods, this means food will not dry out, unless you want it to by not keeping water in the pan. This takes much of the fussiness out of smoking. This accessory works with all meats, but especially chicken and turkey by keeping it moist. Pork ribs and red meats are very moist. The Smokenator is versatile; you can even cook a 25-pound turkey. The Smokenator is shipped with complete instructions, on how to regulate the Weber to produce excellent smoked food in the classic way. The instructions show you how to set up your Weber Kettle's, lower and upper vents and gives you clear concise instructions on how to regulate the air needed to smoke your food when you use Kingsford charcoal. These instructions represent over 40 hours of research and effort, putting you ahead. If you are looking for a way to stretch the versatility of your 26.75" Weber and save space, the Smokenator 2600 is for you.Do you want a Smokenator and expand your smoking capacity? Double Deck your Weber with Smokenator 2600 & Hovergrill Kit.

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Thursday, 6 October 2011

Electric Smokers - Unique features for easy use

!±8± Electric Smokers - Unique features for easy use

An electric smoker has his own style and functionality. The three basic functions when it comes to smoking electrical temperature control, and security capabilities.

Most smokers have electric temperature control settings, like an oven. And 'the default setting of a calibrated temperature and keep them maintenance free. Others are cold enough for the smoke, the taste of food control. This technique uses smoke to flavor the meat without proper cooking.

Electric Smokers are available in a variety ofSize. Some can be as big as a trash can or a large grid, according to the needs of the food. Large units can smoke a larger volume of meat looks like a closet or a refrigerator. Others are as large as an entire room with a smoker in the system is installed.

Many smokers smoke without fire, electrical process for safer use. To avoid that some functions to control the time of smoking.

Luhr Jensen, a smoker smoking is an electrical box type. The capacity is 50 pounds, as Big Chief.The 256 pound capacity is the Head Small. This covers a temperature of 165 degrees automatically, especially when it is full. Also maintains the 70 degrees of outside temperature. Head just can smoke up to 15 pounds of fish and meat. The big boss can smoke up to 50 pounds.

Luhr Jensen Smokers are easy to use because it comes with instructions and a recipe book. The first part of the smoking process ensures food is raised above 146of pasteurized. The food is cooked in a very finallow temperatures without controls and thermostats.

Bradley smokers smokers are versatile, the cold, smoking hot and dry can be used. You can also use for drainage purposes, and frying. The smoker is ideal for all types of fish, meat and vegetables. The temperature can be set up to 320oF for smoking and roasting hot. This device looks like a refrigerator. You put the food on the shelves and let stand until it's finished. It 'very easy to use.

SmokeGenerator produces smoke and heat, with the possibility of 8 hours, unattended. Smoke generators are endless automatic controls. It has two independent heating elements. One thing is for burning bisquettes the taste and the other is for the inside of the cabinet or smoke. Bisquettes can be done at a time. Low temperature can be controlled.

Cookshack Smoker line adjustable temperature set to 100 to 250oF. Requires a small amount of wood for the taste of smoke.The temperature can be adjusted so hot when the food is ready. These can be used outdoors in the park just across the courtyard.

Brinkmann 810-7080-8 slowly cooked and smoked barbecue. The two chrome-plated steel grills can be up to 50 pounds of food. Cooks grill top and bottom are set the same temperature. You can use the meat cooks faster at the top for easy removal. There is also a separate base pan for easy cleaning and setup. Brinkmann 810-7080-8 smoke in a goodTurkeys.


Electric Smokers - Unique features for easy use

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Friday, 30 September 2011

Tips for shopping for the best BBQ Smoking

!±8± Tips for shopping for the best BBQ Smoking

Personal goals and expectations will ultimately dictate the choice of the best barbecue smoking. Some think that the kitchen in a more laborious UDS (smoker vertical drum) or vertical water smoker, the most authentic taste. Others believe that the traditional cuisine in a smoker or a smoking offsets the base of the cylinder, the highest quality home-made. The possibility of gas or electric, coal or wood BBQ smoking result in different flavors.

The first time, grill cooks and less committedshould start with the smoke down to mid-price segment as well as used. The best barbecue smokers are designed to optimize the task of all the electronic controls, the Lazy-Q, built in thermometer and heat shield lower, saving combination smoker and grill or outdoor stoves. Bar-B-Chef, Big Drum Smoker, Bradley Brinkman, Camp Chef, Char-Broil, Char-Grills, Masterbuilt, Old Smokey and Weber Smokey Mountain are popular choices.

BBQ enthusiasts, restaurants and chefs should be zeroHigh-End-Big Green Egg Cookshack as smoking, JR Enterprises, Lang, Klose, and Pitts Spitts, Super Cajun, that good, and Traeger pellet. Full-smoking competition on the ranges, built in refrigerator 4-6 barbecue grill types, high-precision temperature control, smoking, industrial strength, all emphasize the quality.

Whether that turns to an old Japanese smoking patches handmade ceramic and thermostat between smoking hot and cold and cook-off and the smoke of innovative customTexan David Klose BBQ Smoker best fire your passion for grilling. It can be in the stands, and concession trailers are fully equipped as a mobile cart for catering guest BBQ and side street.


Tips for shopping for the best BBQ Smoking

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Monday, 26 September 2011

Cookshack FEC100 Fast Eddy Smoker 11 Square Feet of Cooking Space

!±8±Cookshack FEC100 Fast Eddy Smoker 11 Square Feet of Cooking Space

Brand : Cookshack
Rate :
Price :
Post Date : Sep 26, 2011 13:00:34
N/A



FEC100 Fast Eddy - Smoker Stainless interior/exterior 11 sq ft cooking space 4 ea 23 x 17 shleves food capacity 100 lbs per load. 120v 5 amps 36 000 BTU burner electronically-controlled thermostat; auto-start; draft fan NSF approved and UL Listed.

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Friday, 23 September 2011

Smokin Tex 1400 Pro Series Electric Bbq Smoker

!±8±Smokin Tex 1400 Pro Series Electric Bbq Smoker

Brand : Smokin Tex
Rate :
Price : $589.00
Post Date : Sep 23, 2011 11:45:07
Usually ships in 2-3 business days



Smokin Tex 1400 Pro Series Electric BBQ Smoker. 1400. Stainless Steel Smokers. The Smokin Tex 1400 Pro Series Stainless Steel Electric Smoker is easy to use, just plug it in, put in the wood and food, shut the door, and set the temperature. Enjoy authentic old-fashioned pit barbecue and delicious natural wood smoked foods. Your food is slow cooked with exact temperature control from 100-250 degrees and will require no attention during cooking! This electric smoker features all stainless steel construction to survive the elements and double wall insulation to keep it cool to the touch. Controlled heat, combined with the no-draft cooking conditions produces a consistently moist and tender product. Smoker has five shelf positions and includes three 14 1/2 x 14 1/2 inch shelves for a maximum capacity of approximately 35 lbs. Comes equipped with a stainless steel drip pan, four caster wheels, cookbook, and instructions. Electric smoker requires 700W/10 amps/120V. Smoker Dimensions (in inches): 17 1/2 W x 21 D x 29 H (including wheels) 26 3/4 H (without wheels).

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Tuesday, 20 September 2011

CB CB600X LP Vertical Smoker

!±8± CB CB600X LP Vertical Smoker

Brand : Char-Broil | Rate : | Price : $138.95
Post Date : Sep 20, 2011 21:00:23 | Usually ships in 3-4 business days


CB600X LP Vertical Smoker "3 chrome-plated cooking grates Warming rack on top of smoker chamber Porcelain wood chip and water pan Secondary door to access charcoal tray and water pan without losing heat Chrome-plated cool-touch handles Temperature gauge 16,500 BTU aluminized burner Rotary ignitor 578 sq. in. of cooking surface 7,566 cubic inches of cooking space Grease cup for easy clean-up"

More Specification..!!

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