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| Q-talk *ON TOPIC ONLY* QUALITY ON TOPIC discussion of Backyard BBQ, grilling, Equipment and just outdoor cookin' in general, hints, tips, tricks & techniques, success, failures... but stay on topic. And watch for that hijacking. |
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#1 |
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is one Smokin' Farker
Join Date: 02-05-09
Location: Seattle, WA
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We're on a long road trip. Just started week 7 of 8. We're living out of a cooler to hold meat, and similar things. I'm frustrated with this cooler. It seems to me that all coolers have the same design deficiencies. They are built like one featureless box, and you put ice in the bottom where it melts, so that your food has to marinate in ice water. Over time ziplocs leak, jar labels turn gooey, and it's just *so funky*. Why o why doesn't someone make an extra deep cooler with a nice rack that sits up above the ice to keep everything out of the water?
I got excited when I found out about Yeti coolers. Just looked at them. Same dumb aspect ratio. You can get them up to like 55" long but not deep. It's like everyone's copying a design from the 1940s. I'm posting this in hopes that I'm wrong, that there is one out there. And coolers *are* on topic for BBQ guys. Who among us hasn't brought meat to a remote site to cook, or used a cooler to hold hot foiled smoked roasts to let their temp equilibrate? seattlepitboss |
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#2 |
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Moderator Emeritus
![]() Join Date: 04-08-04
Location: Marianna, FL
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I understand your frustration.
We just put stuff we don't want wet (like sandwiches) in sealed TupperWare containers. We also may put a plastic "bin" over the ice to keep stuff in it out of the water without sealing. A "work around" that fixes it for us. Good Luck. TIM
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"Flirtin' with Disaster" BBQ Team (RETIRED) FBA and KCBS Cook and Judge. Former owner of a WSM, a Smokey Joe, a Charbroil Commercial gasser (junk), and the legendary "StudeDera". Now cooking with a FEC100, a Traeger Lil' Tex, and a Fast Eddy PG500 Proud Pellet guy cooking on real wood.
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#3 |
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Babbling Farker
Join Date: 01-16-07
Location: Southern MN
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They are called Cambros. They work great to keep stuff cold too. Or you could buy one of those airling carts that have all the trays for cold storage. Its just a tall cambro though.
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Dan MJH From Backyard Bomber BBQ ---- X 2 Junior & Stretch 22.5 Weber Kettle Blue Thermopen Comp Team Wine & Swine This is funner than chuckin rocks at a sign. John Godwin (Duck Dynasty) |
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#4 |
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Full Fledged Farker
Join Date: 02-02-12
Location: Nashville, Tn
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We rebag ice in gallon Ziploc bags. This greatly cuts down on the water in the cooler and seems to help cube ice to last a little longer.
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Traeger Lil' Tex Elite, WSM, Green SS Performer, 22" OTG, hyperfast orange Thermapen. CBJ. |
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#5 |
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Full Fledged Farker
Join Date: 01-31-11
Location: Jasper, Alabama
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I drop a stainless restaurant tray over the ice and place the food inside the tray. I also leave the drain open so I don't slosh water into the pans as I travel... although I realize the drain open might not be an option.
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Oklahoma Joe Longhorn ~ Smokin Tex 1500 CXLD |
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#6 |
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is one Smokin' Farker
![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: 10-17-10
Location: Livermore, CA
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We use Crypopaks from Restaurant Depot. They are a reusable gel pack that work much better than ice, but we have found that they work much better when placed in a quart sized ziploc. The gel packs are susceptible to tears after a few uses, so placing them in ziplocs gives them a longer life span. These things get seriously cold, and last way longer than ice.
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Dave CBJ, 15' custom BBQ trailer with a Backwoods Competitor, Pitts & Spitts off-set, & Santa Maria grill. Ole Hickory CTO, 1 BGE, 2 Weber kettles and 1 Smokey Joe, BWS Chubby, Sonoma gasser, and a BBQ store full of everything BBQ. |
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| Thanks from:---> |
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#8 |
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Babbling Farker
Join Date: 07-04-09
Location: Jonesboro,Tx
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Yettie
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I never met a Cow that I didn't like with a little Salt & Pepper! Certified PORK-A-HOLIC |
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#9 |
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On the road to being a farker
Join Date: 09-27-12
Location: Mayer, MN
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Also use blocks of ice instead of cubes, less surface area so they melt at a slower rate.
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22.5" Weber One Touch Gold, New Braunfels El Dorado, Country Smoker TG-300 Tailgater |
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#10 |
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is One Chatty Farker
Join Date: 12-08-09
Location: Turlock, California
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What about using dry-ice? I've never used it. but it seems like it might be a good option. Also, you could get a travel refridgerator, they just plug into a power-port.
Matt |
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#11 | |
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somebody shut me the fark up.
![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: 07-08-10
Location: Dallas, TX
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Quote:
I have a Coleman six-day marine cooler that is big enough for my food, plus two gallon milk jugs of frozen water. It makes them into plastic wrapped ice blocks. CD
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1995 Red Weber 22.5 Master's Touch with Cajun Bandit Rotisserie mod, 18.5 WSM with iQue 110, 18.5 OTG, Copper Smokey Joe Gold with Mini-WSM mod, Black Smokey Joe Platinum (Jumbo Joe) IMBAS Certified MOINK Baller. ![]() From hero to ZERO in just one week! ![]() Are you ready for a THROWDOWN?
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#12 |
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Knows what a fatty is.
Join Date: 08-01-12
Location: West Jordan, Utah
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Masterbuilt Gas Smokehouse | Mini WSM | Weber Genesis Silver B | ECB | ET-73 |
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#13 |
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Full Fledged Farker
![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: 12-14-11
Location: Forest Grove, Oregon
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This summer I delivered buffalo meat to clients around the midwest. I used a Coleman 200 qt cooler and dry ice. We started with 300 lbs of frozen meat and 15 lbs of dry ice. The dry ice lasted two days in the back of my pickup in ninety degree temps. The cooler top stayed sealed. I do not know if that is common, but I was hoping that the dry ice would last longer. For our three week trip we used close to $ 300.00 of dry ice.
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#14 |
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somebody shut me the fark up.
Join Date: 08-13-03
Location: St. Peters MO
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Here's a couple more options:
OPTION 1 As already mentioned; get a thermoelectric cooler. These tend to generate temperatures about 30 deg. under ambient (or 40 deg. over ambient in the heating mode). OPTION 2 Get a DC to AC power converter and use it to power a small 120-volt AC refrigeratir or chest freezer.
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Dr. Mark (STL) Ph.D. (honorary) Bovine $hitology A thin line separates paranoia from an acute understanding of reality. |
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#15 |
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is one Smokin' Farker
![]() ![]() Join Date: 08-16-11
Location: Saint Cloud, FL
Downloads: 0
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I don't have a solution, but I have had the same (frustrating) thoughts that you expressed.
It seems to me that there should be a "dry well" in the middle of the cooler. You fill *around* the well with ice, and put all your food in the middle. I have thought about trying to create something along those lines by putting a tall plastic box in the middle of my cooler - with clean bricks on the bottom to keep it from floating when the ice melts. Haven't gotten around to trying it yet though.
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Lang 48 Original Superfast RED ThermaPen "I love animals. I just love to eat them more. Fun to pet; better to chew." - Jim Gaffigan |
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