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Episode: 1591
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Title: HPR1591: The Ultimate Cooking Device
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1591/hpr1591.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 05:32:56
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---
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
|
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
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Ah, right.
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HPR. HPR. HPR.
|
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We'll hit you with our big nerd, Explanive Deleted.
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We are here to do some special HPR type content.
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And this time we wanted to talk about my favorite multipurpose, all functional, all
|
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amazing cooking device, the Weber charcoal grill, and you know, I've contributed
|
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to Hacker Public Radio one other time, and Sean has never even heard of Hacker Public
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Radio.
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I had to be educating.
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So we were talking, you need to talk up a little bit as you're making.
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Sorry about that.
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I mean, actually talk up, not just say the same volume.
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Got you, okay.
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So, and the reason I want to talk about my Weber grill is because it's fucking amazing.
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Like the quintessential summertime omnipurpose?
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Well, not just summertime, spring, winter, fall.
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I consider it a four-season cooking device.
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And here are some of the things you can do on a charcoal grill.
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It is a charcoal barbecue.
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It is a charcoal smoker.
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It is a charcoal-powered wok cooking machine.
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It is a wood-fired pizza oven.
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What fired pizza?
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Oh, you're damn right, my friend.
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You have peaked my interests, sir.
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All right.
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So, about three or four years ago, I was talking to Casey about my wife about getting a charcoal
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grill.
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And I really wanted a Weber grill, I was thinking.
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We had propane grill at the old place, and it was really old and broken down.
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We ended up just mashing it up, putting in the garbage when we moved.
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So it had tipped over in the way in the glass front of it, broke out, anyways.
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So we're looking on Amazon, and there are about 120, 130 bucks for a Weber grill, 100
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bucks.
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They sound different size.
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I mean, I've seen the mini, but is there any size besides the little one, the big, or
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is there a big big?
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Yeah.
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So there's a 22-inch, and I think an 18-inch, the littler one, and the little countertop
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kind of size one.
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Right.
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And then there are some different models of the 22-inch, which is the 22 and a half-inch,
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which is the standard kettle drum size, but then they make it so that it's the regular
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one with the little vents in a small aluminum tray, which is what I have.
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Then they make one that has kind of a fancier drip collection system for grease and for the
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spill, you know, the little bit of spill that you get out of the vents.
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And then there's one that's built into like a rolling countertop kind of thing, and the
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fancier ones have like a little thing where you take the lid off and you can set it in
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this little wire rack on the back to hold it.
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And all sizes will work all things, all sizes will do smoking, and maybe a pizza.
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I'm talking explicitly the 22-inch standard Weber grill.
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Now the fancier ones are still 22-inch, they just add some other features to it, but we're
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still talking the 22-inch grill, okay?
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So as a normal charcoal grill, I like to use the chimney, the standard Weber brand chimney
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that is galvanized on the outside, it has a plastic handle, which I like.
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I've had two of the other chimneys that are cheaper, and they have wooden handles with
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little spikes to stick in that pop out of the handle, and it's really annoying.
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This one has a molded on plastic handle that's metal and goes into the side of the chimney,
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and then it has a secondary wire handle that allows you to hold the one handle and then
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use it for tipping safely or more safely the charcoal, okay?
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You with me so far?
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Yeah, and that gathers a bit too little.
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Now the reason you use the chimney is, you know, we all remember as a kid, the taken
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and spraying the grill lighter fluid, and it gives us lighter fluid smell.
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Yeah, and I don't like that.
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I want charcoal grill, right?
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So the chimney allows you to, you can use paper, if you are a newspaper guy, you can
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stuff newspaper on the bottom and use a couple of those to light the charcoal, and then
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you don't get the lighter fluid, but I have recently turned onto these little Weber cells
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them, and you can get them at lows or Home Depot.
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They're little perifin tablets, and so you set the chimney and set the perifin tablet
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on the bottom charcoal rack, and then you set the chimney on it, and you light it, and
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it'll burn enough to start.
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And it's like $3.25 to $4 for a pack of $12, or maybe it's a pack of $24, or these little
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perifin tablets.
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And what's the burnable, I mean perifin is wax, right?
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No, perifin is a petroleum-based product.
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So, and it burns like a gel, like a solid, like a...
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It's like a wax.
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So, a perifin is a petroleum-based, wax-y substance, and it's oil-infused or fuel-infused.
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It is a fuel-in and of itself, perifin wax has been used in canning for the top of canning.
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When you don't want to do water bath canning or pressure canning, you can do perifin canning
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where you heat it up to a boil, and then you seal the top with a perifin wax, and then
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put the lid on.
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And the perifin wax makes a sterile plug in the top of it for canning.
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But it's the same kind of wax, it'll burn as a fuel-perifin is actually another name
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used for kerosene in the UK, yeah.
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It's not kerosene, but a perifin wax is a petroleum product that will burn as a fuel
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as well.
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There's perifin wax candles and stuff like that.
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And what do you say per per pellet is about how much cost?
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Per pellet?
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I don't know.
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You don't have to do the math.
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Pack of 24 is like $350.
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Oh, I got you.
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I got you.
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Yeah.
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So whatever that works out to, a couple pennies to light it.
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And it is a petroleum-based product, but you know, you can light it using pure wood products,
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but...
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Well, newspaper being...
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Newspaper.
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But I don't see the issue is I don't really, we recycle all our cardboard, and then you're
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burning cardboard, which has...
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Different smell word.
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Yeah.
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Well, it has coloring in it that I don't know what that burning is doing.
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And I don't get a newspaper anymore, I'm a man of the digital millennia.
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Right.
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So...
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So, now we just got into it.
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We were able to heat up charcoal without using lighter fluid, and now we can do this anywhere.
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Okay.
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It doesn't require us to be at our house.
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We could go to a park.
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We can take it on the mountains.
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We could take it to the parking lot for a little bit of tailgating for the local Broncos game.
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That's damn right.
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We're Broncos fans.
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Broncos.
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So...
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||||
Now we're just talking barbecuing.
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||||
So straight up barbecuing.
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This is hot cooking method for your vener stencils, your bratwurst, your little smoky
|
||||
sausages, you know, a steak, a grill, a mean steak on the grill.
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Now do you use something to cover the grill, like a mat or foil, or...
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It's a cast iron grate, and if you just keep...
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I like to use a lard for seasoning it, so you'll season it like a cast iron pan.
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||||
And just use a brush to knock off the chunky bits.
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Rub a little lard on there to season it, and it's a non-stick surface.
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Boom.
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Done.
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||||
I don't want to talk about that anymore.
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||||
All right.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
But I'm glad you brought that up.
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||||
Yeah.
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||||
Because you've seen those, like, miracle mat or whatever, where you can throw it on the surface.
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||||
And I don't know.
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||||
I don't think they're a necessity.
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I don't really care.
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Especially if it's your grill and seasoned.
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Yeah.
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||||
Rub a little lard on it.
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I mean, it seasons up like a cast iron skillet.
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Don't overthink it.
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Stop overthink and cry.
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Okay.
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Next.
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Okay.
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So that's...
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Now if we want to use it as a smoker, here's what you do.
|
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So we're talking about an emulation of the charcoal vertical smokers.
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How we smoke on it is you take and fill your chimney up halfway to all the way with charcoal and light it.
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Till it is glowing red and develops a little bit of gray ash on the outside of the charcoal.
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It's totally hot.
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Okay.
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Completely heated.
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And we want to put in an equivalent amount depending on how long we're doing.
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So let's say we're smoking some chicken thighs.
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That's not a real long smoking process.
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We're going to use half of a chimney a charcoal.
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We're going to use another half a chimney of cold charcoal laid in one half of the barbecue.
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And then we're going to pour the hot charcoal on top of the cold charcoal.
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And that's going to kick start the cooking process.
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But as those...
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We're going to maintain temperature that way because those dying embers will ignite the under and you get a longer burn time.
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Okay.
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In the other half, we're going to put a water pan.
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I personally own a little stainless steel square pan that I like to put that's reusable.
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You can also use a standard chafing aluminum pan.
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You know, like the kind you would get for putting on a disposable chafing tray.
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You get them into your local grocery store or party stores.
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Have them.
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You know, a little aluminum pan.
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That's not disposable, do you?
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Yep. And we're going to fill it with about an inch of water in the bottom of the pan.
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And that's the same as you would do in a charcoal smoker or electric smoker to provide moisture
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and a cool surface underneath the meat you're smoking.
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Then let's say we're going to put these chicken thighs or a rack of ribs or whatever we're trying to get a smoky flavor of brisket, pork butt,
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pork tenderloin.
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We said butt.
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Yeah, it comes from the butt.
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We're literally talking about here.
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Sorry.
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A rump roast in a cow would be cool.
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Cool. Whatever we're smoking.
|
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Time to smoke depends on volume of meat.
|
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A lot of factors, the thickness of the meat.
|
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So this is a hot smoking method.
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The same as your typical electric propane powered or charcoal powered smoker is.
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These are hot smoke methods, meaning that you're just trying to impart smoke flavor in a barbecue or roasted meat.
|
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Okay.
|
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So our smoking period.
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On top of that charcoal, we're going to put a lump or a pelletized hardwood.
|
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I like using lump hardwood for this charcoal method.
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Do not soak your charcoal your wood.
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Okay.
|
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Stop soaking your wood chips and stop soaking.
|
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Okay, you want to create smoke.
|
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And they're saying that that prevents smoke and fire.
|
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It doesn't.
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Here's what it does.
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You take those hot charcoals.
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You got a hot grill going.
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You put the lid on.
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You let it heat up to about to its cooking temperature for about five, six minutes to come up to temp.
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You open it up and you threw something wet on there and you created a whole bunch of steam.
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The drop the overall temperature and you cool down the charcoal.
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Okay, that hardwood is going to smoke naturally because the temperature of charcoal is colder than what wood burns at.
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So it's going to smoke anyways.
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And you have 20 minutes, 35 minutes, 45 minutes to maybe an hour tops depending on how much hardwood you put in there for the smoking phase.
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Once smoke is penetrated into the meat, you're done smoking.
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Now you're just oven roasting basically inside your charcoal oven.
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And you're maintaining temperature.
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If you're doing ribs, it could be four to five hours for a rack of ribs.
|
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You're talking an hour and a half maybe for some chicken thighs to an hour.
|
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You know, it all depends.
|
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And I like to use an immersion digital immersion thermometer that has a heat proof lining on it.
|
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I got it off Amazon.
|
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It's some brand with a P and we can throw a link in the show notes to it on Amazon.
|
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But it has a set point temperature.
|
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So let's say I'm trying to get the meat up to a perfect 165 degrees.
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I'm just going to throw that out there.
|
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I slide this probe thermometer in.
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I run the cable out of the lid and over to the little outdoor table I have sitting next to it.
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I set the set point for 165 degrees for the alarm.
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And I just leave her set.
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And that alarm will go beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep.
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I go sit in my hammock.
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I get some of them on my acrobrew.
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I sit down.
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I put my tablet in a waterproof case.
|
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I set up my sprayer that sits on the end of the hose.
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And I sit out there on a nice hot 100 degree day getting sprayed and cooled down with my spritzer.
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Reading a book on my digital tablet, swinging in my hammock and joining my day.
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You've got to stop the spritzing if you're brushed out the tablet.
|
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No, no, no.
|
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I have a waterproof case that I slide in.
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A waterproof tablet.
|
||||
Nice.
|
||||
No, it's a little case.
|
||||
It's like a $8 case that I got off Amazon that you put it in and it's waterproof and you can still use the touchscreen.
|
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Yeah.
|
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Yeah, because I'm a nerd.
|
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So I'm swinging in my hammock.
|
||||
I'm drinking a micro-brew.
|
||||
I'm waiting for this thing to come up to temp.
|
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And it just goes, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep.
|
||||
You know, if I'm doing ribs, I want to flip it at a certain point.
|
||||
So there's a timer on there too.
|
||||
I guess at the time of for an hour.
|
||||
beep, beep, beep, beep, beep.
|
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I go, I flip the ribs at an hour so that I can cook evenly on both sides or flip the chicken breast or flip the breast kit or whatever.
|
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And then when the probe says it's done, it's done.
|
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I serve it up.
|
||||
So now it's our spoker.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
Now let's talk about a wood-fired pizza oven.
|
||||
This is number two.
|
||||
You can buy a kit that has a metal ring with a cutout in it that raises up the lid and gives you a cooking space.
|
||||
It's like a sleeve, like a little...
|
||||
It's a 22 and a half-inch diameter ring that sets down into the grill and you set the lid on top of it.
|
||||
And there's a little cutout that looks like a pizza oven where you stick the peel in, which is the wood paddle that you use in a wood-fired oven.
|
||||
That extra head space gives you room to get the temperature up.
|
||||
So you start at a small charcoal grill.
|
||||
Use maybe a quarter to three to a third, maybe a half of a chimney worth a charcoal.
|
||||
And then you use a wood media to build a wood fire in the backside of the bottom of this.
|
||||
And you use a ceramic or tile pizza stone that is set on the rack and a peel.
|
||||
And you can throw it in there.
|
||||
Now this is a good thing.
|
||||
Now pizza stone, you can pretty much get it anywhere like Wal-Mart or...
|
||||
Yeah, and they're $25 to $30.
|
||||
They sell a specific one that's designed for this.
|
||||
I don't think it's needed.
|
||||
They want like almost a hundred bucks for this thing.
|
||||
For the pizza stone.
|
||||
It's like $130 for the basic ring that goes on it.
|
||||
I think Bobby's going to make one in the shop for me.
|
||||
Because I'm that kind of nerd.
|
||||
But to me, I don't know that I necessarily need the cutout in the side because the lid still functions as a lid.
|
||||
And I don't like using a pizza stone anyways.
|
||||
I like using a cast iron pizza kind of griddle thing, 14-inch cast iron griddle.
|
||||
So I'd rather just take the lid off, take it out, slide it onto a put it back.
|
||||
But the trick is that you want the medium you're cooking on.
|
||||
And I'm a huge fan of cast iron.
|
||||
To be up to temp when you put the dough on it.
|
||||
So really you're going to roll out the dough and have the pizza ready and then set it on the hot stone or the hot.
|
||||
And that's what gives the thin crust with a really crunchy bottom and it cooks the top properly.
|
||||
And the reason you want it wood fired oven instead of your regular oven is traditional Napoleon napoli pizza is just really a really hot cooked wood fire oven bread with a little bit of tomato sauce mirrored on it.
|
||||
And that's the origins of pizza.
|
||||
Us as Americans have bastardized it in wonderful ways.
|
||||
Wonderful amazing way.
|
||||
Like pineapple.
|
||||
Well, we put cheese and all kinds of stuff on it.
|
||||
We don't need to go into the different types of pizza.
|
||||
There's amazing times of pizza.
|
||||
But this we're trying to get thin crust, crispy all the way to the center, hot, serage on the top.
|
||||
And we're going to do this in an 800 to a thousand degrees.
|
||||
Can't do that in an inside.
|
||||
Is there any caveat to doing that in the Weber or that's hot?
|
||||
Yeah, it's hot as fuck and you need to be careful.
|
||||
Well, right, don't know touching.
|
||||
You're going to burn the hell out of yourself.
|
||||
You know, there's a danger factor that you're dealing with something that the top of that kettle drum is going to be 800 to a thousand degrees.
|
||||
And you know, there's nothing preventing a little kid from coming out and touching it.
|
||||
There's nothing preventing when you take that lid off to setting it on your leg or your foot on something that's combustible.
|
||||
Structural, you're okay.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
||||
It's going to hold the heat.
|
||||
So it's not going to burn its way through the bottom of the circuit?
|
||||
No, sir.
|
||||
Nope, your still kettle drum has a great on it.
|
||||
You know, it'll handle the thousand degrees.
|
||||
No problem and hold the cause of.
|
||||
You want to keep the fire kind of away from the edges of the grill.
|
||||
But that's not hard to do.
|
||||
You can rake the coals and stuff like that.
|
||||
So it's all reasonably safe.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
And now you've got a top of the line.
|
||||
Wood fired pizza oven.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Now you want to do another hot cooking method.
|
||||
And that's some stir fry.
|
||||
So Weber makes an insert that fits in the 22 inch.
|
||||
That has an 18 inch grate that lifts out of the center.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
And these are about $22 on Amazon Prime Ship.
|
||||
You take out this 18 and you can fit.
|
||||
You can go down to your, you can order a high carbon steel thin walled round bottom walk.
|
||||
If you go to your agent store, it'll cost you 22, 25 bucks.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
This is what real walk cookers cook on.
|
||||
And the people that do stir fry professionally on it.
|
||||
And they have special foot powered oxygen natural gas,
|
||||
where it injects oxygen to get that temperature up to that 700, 800, 900 degree range,
|
||||
where you're super hot.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
And you can't do that on a stove on the inside.
|
||||
Because you don't get, you might get the bottom to that temperature.
|
||||
But really part of it is the sides and the heat coming up the sides of the walk
|
||||
that allow for you to shake and sear and move things around and put the oil in and do that kind of stuff.
|
||||
You can do that on a charcoal grill.
|
||||
You jack it up.
|
||||
You pour the, you pour a full thing of the chimney right in the center.
|
||||
You put the walk in the hole.
|
||||
You start heating that up.
|
||||
You can get it up to a hot, consistent temperature and you can cook genuine well done stir fry.
|
||||
Well now you got cast iron cookery, which I'm a big fan.
|
||||
I have a cast iron.
|
||||
I have about six cast iron products including a Dutch oven with a lid that turns into a frying pan
|
||||
and different sizes of pans all the way down to little mini ones.
|
||||
And now you can take that cast iron Dutch oven.
|
||||
You could bake in that outside.
|
||||
You can bake whatever you want.
|
||||
You can cook whatever you want.
|
||||
You got everything you need in one device.
|
||||
Now let me tell you the origin of being in this Weber grill.
|
||||
I think I started talking about it and buried the lead.
|
||||
We were looking on Amazon.
|
||||
They're about a hundred bucks.
|
||||
In case he was like, well, I really don't want to spend that kind of money right now.
|
||||
So we're like, okay, let's look on Craigslist to see if anybody's got a used one.
|
||||
So we pull up Craigslist and they go, Weber Grill.
|
||||
Free includes chimney charcoal and lighter fluid.
|
||||
What?
|
||||
It was two blocks away from my house.
|
||||
We jumped in the car.
|
||||
We drove up there.
|
||||
We threw it to the back of the car.
|
||||
We drove a home.
|
||||
I've had it for four years.
|
||||
It was perfect.
|
||||
It's the one you've seen me cooking on.
|
||||
So I got it absolutely free to start with.
|
||||
So depending on the amount of money you want to spend on this, I think the Weber Grill is the ultimate cooking device.
|
||||
Now what about multi-season, backup multi-season?
|
||||
Because you just said I cook a mine year round.
|
||||
Really?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
You know, on a really cold day, it's nothing's cooler than bundling up, going outside and huddling around a really hot stove for cooking.
|
||||
It's fun.
|
||||
I like it.
|
||||
Nice.
|
||||
And you got a smartphone next to you.
|
||||
I can set a timer on that.
|
||||
I can use my little insertion thermometer.
|
||||
Well, that was another question I had.
|
||||
How do you verify oven temperature?
|
||||
Firstly, like the pizza.
|
||||
You want to get 800 to 1,000 degrees.
|
||||
How do you know?
|
||||
You get an oven thermometer.
|
||||
With a range up to 1,000 degrees.
|
||||
And you set it on the grill.
|
||||
And how do you maintain that by rearranging?
|
||||
How do you maintain it?
|
||||
What if it starts climbing higher?
|
||||
What if it starts?
|
||||
The vents.
|
||||
I don't know.
|
||||
It's all about venting.
|
||||
You shut down the vents a little bit and you'll lower the temp.
|
||||
And it's the same with your barbecuing.
|
||||
Let's say I'm doing steaks.
|
||||
Steaks like the hottest temperature you can possibly get.
|
||||
So I put that charcoal and I open the vents on the bottom all the way and I leave the lid off.
|
||||
And this makes these things hotter than hell.
|
||||
And I put that on and I sear the outside of that steak like that.
|
||||
But let's say we're cooking a hamburger.
|
||||
I want to cook through a little bit more and I don't need as high a temperature.
|
||||
I'm going to throw them on, put the lid on and I'm going to half all the vents.
|
||||
When I'm smoking I want half the half vents on everything.
|
||||
And that'll keep that temperature hovering around 300 degrees.
|
||||
You mentioned hardwood.
|
||||
What's your favorite as far as...
|
||||
Hardwood.
|
||||
Do you have a favorite?
|
||||
I like hardwood.
|
||||
Well there's variety of hardwood.
|
||||
Try them out, man.
|
||||
That's a great thing.
|
||||
You can try out apple, peachwood, muskete, mahogany, alder.
|
||||
Go try it out, man.
|
||||
In fact, if you're out in Colorado, you can go to Kimtovic meats, which is a meat purveyor of traditional aged beef and all kinds of traditional butchery that's located down here.
|
||||
Or Edward's meats, which is another purveyor that I grew up next to and re-ridged, so...
|
||||
Sport local.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Well I think that wraps it up for our HBR episode.
|
||||
Webber barbecues.
|
||||
Webber barbecues are the best.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Till next time.
|
||||
Oh, I should say, we are from the Alpha Geeks podcast.
|
||||
If you want to check that out, you can check out AlphaGeeks at alphagix.libson.com.
|
||||
I am a longtime Linux fan and hacker and general nerd.
|
||||
We talk about all kinds of stuff.
|
||||
We wrap up, hold the hell out of everything.
|
||||
We're all three to four people that are on the podcast.
|
||||
Really close friends that have known each other for a long time.
|
||||
And if you enjoy that kind of podcast, come check us out.
|
||||
This is HBR only content.
|
||||
We love HBR.
|
||||
We love all you guys out there.
|
||||
So if you want to contribute a show, we encourage you to send one in.
|
||||
Anybody can be a podcaster.
|
||||
Till next time, podcast out.
|
||||
You've been listening to HackerPublic Radio as HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday and Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute ring to find out how easy it is.
|
||||
HackerPublic Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicom computer club,
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at beamrev.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the road.
|
||||
Create a comments at www.HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the road.
|
||||
Create a comments at www.HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
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