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I cooked them at 250F. The part I had trouble with was scraping the skin with the paint scraper. Any advice?
I found that the only thing that really works for me is very sharp flexible boning/fillet knife. I keep the skins in the fridge and work on them while they are still cold as the the fat comes off easier
 
I keep the skins in the fridge and work on them while they are still cold as the the fat comes off easier

I did this the last time I did chicken and it works REALLY well. I use a santoku knife to scrape mine.

I have not tried the muffin pan. I trim my thighs down to the same size and pull the skin tight aorund them to bind them and put them in a small aluminum pan. My pans are 15" square and just fit in my masterbuilt smoker.

I don't compete, but I keep "practicing" on my family and friends...they like being the guinea pigs!
 
A good trick to scraping the skin, hold the blade of the knife with your fingertips. I have tried the scraper and the razor....prefer a 3" paring knife and hold the blade. You eventually get the "tenderfoot" sense where your fingers feel the drag and difference between fat scraping and skin.
 
5 hours?? Holy crap, we cook our thighs for an hour for comps.

I use a clam knife to scrape the skins. Can't wait to get back into competition season, nothing better than standing there scraping skins for a few hours. PITA, but it pays off, we always finish well with our chicken entries.
 
I am trying it again tonight just put them on at 830, 350F, and didnt feel like scraping the skin. I only have hickory wood so intead of putting the chunk on the charcoal, I put it on the grill instead.
 
So my results are in with a finished time of 2.15hrs which is much better than the previous 5 hours. I only had five thighs to work with tonight and used my own sauce along with the cajun rub. The rub overpowered the sauce this time. As noted earlier, I put the chunk of hickory wood on the grill instead of the charcoal itself and the one piece last the entire length of the cooking time, so I might try this at the competitions next time but with apple wood of course. After 2 hours the internal temp was 170F so I sauced it up and put it on for another 15mns to carmelize it.

Start Picture:
577506_2100562609611_1711816958_1079436_1898109403_n.jpg

1hour after cooking from 350F to 300F
156424_2100563729639_1711816958_1079438_75089418_n.jpg


2hours cooking from 300F to 250F
522132_2100564849667_1711816958_1079441_1726422584_n.jpg

Last 15 mins cooking from 250F to 200F
549175_2100565569685_1711816958_1079443_683823877_n.jpg
 
Great, another thing I absolutely have to try. Adding it to the menu.

Looks really good, man.

Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2
 
I am trying it again tonight just put them on at 830, 350F, and didnt feel like scraping the skin. I only have hickory wood so intead of putting the chunk on the charcoal, I put it on the grill instead.

so how did the skin come out if you didnt scrape? did you get a good bite through?
and yes the second try looks a whole lot better
 
3 hours still seems like an awful long time for those little guys. Something's not right. Oops, I think I'm not reading the post right, is that 2 hours and 15 minutes cooking time? That's closer, but still seems like a lot of time.

Looks good though.
 
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