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What's New?

Bill-Chicago

somebody shut me the fark up.

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Professor Dickweed
We've pretty much covered fatty variations.

Taken on a fair share of pepper varieties too.

Puppy Peters, grilled pizza, chilli varieties, cheesey bread, pig candy and jerky.

Beer can, injection and brines have been given time too.

So, I ask in earnest.

What's New?

I was talking to Mary about this just today.

Have we covered it all?

Is there anything left to experiment with?

Get your imaginations going.

What would You, like to try?

I would love to stumble onto something that makes me yearn to start the pit, other than the same old, same old.
 
I want to do a prime rib. put my weber ring on the drum and fire it up. What about matambre's and stuffed roasts etc
 
What is matambre's?

We spent a bit of time stuffing pork loins. Do you have a stuffed roast in mind?

I just thought a good brain wracking was in order, just to get a new "thing" going in Summer 2007.
 
I want to do a prime rib. put my weber ring on the drum and fire it up. What about matambre's and stuffed roasts etc

Here is a prime rib cooked in my BDS.

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We've pretty much covered fatty variations.

Taken on a fair share of pepper varieties too.

Puppy Peters, grilled pizza, chilli varieties, cheesey bread, pig candy and jerky.

Beer can, injection and brines have been given time too.

So, I ask in earnest.

What's New?

I was talking to Mary about this just today.

Have we covered it all?

Is there anything left to experiment with?

Get your imaginations going.

What would You, like to try?

I would love to stumble onto something that makes me yearn to start the pit, other than the same old, same old.

I want to move back into shoulder clod, chuck roll and whole pork shoulders. It's just so hard to find them....

The last thing I could call "different" were stuffed poblanos. The possibilities are endless. These had beans, cheese, onion, garlic, peppers.

DSC02691a.jpg


DSC02693a.jpg
 
DANG Wayne! That prime is unbelieveable!! I don't think I trust myself with an expensive piece of meat like that in my drum...soon maybe...
 
I'd like to come up with legitimate, winning rubs for all 4 KCBS categories so I can stop buying them. I do have a rib rub that I think is a winner so far but nothing else.
 
Bill I totally understand. It has been a long time since I was excited about BBQing something. It is more of another way to cook dinner than the excitment that used to be present while trying to learn how to make family pleasing ribs, chicken, pork, brisket . . . The people here at work ask me on every Friday, "what are you BBQing this weekend?" Sometimes I want to tell them. "I do have a life away from the pits."

I don' know about you, but Lamb seems like the new frontier for me.
 
Man this one hits home for me too. It has been 6 months since I did a Turkey so I thought that would be cool. Went to three stores and ZERO Turkeys to be found. Did see a frozen goose...hmmm
 
Possum on a pit

Possum on a Pit

Possum should be cleaned as soon as possible after shooting. It should be hung for 48 hours and is then ready to be skinned and cooked. The meat is light-colored and tender. Excess fat may be removed, but there is no strong flavor or odor contained in the fat.

1 possum
1 onion, chopped
1 tabelspoon fat
1/4 teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce
1 cup breadcrumbs
1 hard-boiled egg, chopped
1 teaspoon salt water

Rub possum with your favorite BBQ rum lightly coating. Brown onion in fat. Add possum liver and cook until tender. Add breadcrumbs, Worcestershire, egg, salt, and water. Mix thoroughly and stuff possum. Truss like a fowl. Put in roasting/foil pan with bacon across the back and pour quart of water into pan. Cook uncovered in pit (275 degrees) until tender, about 3 1/2 hours.

There is only one thing to serve possum with --- Sweet Potatoes.

Warning: Although it is well known to be more tender, it is not recommended to use a "Road Kill" Possum (see below). Also, Possum should only be eaten in the winter. Don't ask why. You really don't want to know.

Now hurry, you aint' got much time left for that winter possum.



Addendum for Road Kill Possum:
There ain't really a thing wrong with road kill...you just need to make sure it's fresh. To ensure freshness, just follow these easy steps:

1. Pick a stretch of highway.

2. Ride that stretch of highway @ 4:00 AM and put a chalk mark circle around everything that you find dead.

3. Starting at the same point, re-ride that same stretch @ 6:00 AM. Everything without a circle around it is good to go

Cooler mornings are better
 
Bill I totally understand. It has been a long time since I was excited about BBQing something. It is more of another way to cook dinner than the excitment that used to be present while trying to learn how to make family pleasing ribs, chicken, pork, brisket . . . The people here at work ask me on every Friday, "what are you BBQing this weekend?" Sometimes I want to tell them. "I do have a life away from the pits."

I don' know about you, but Lamb seems like the new frontier for me.

Ditto to all of that. I've always shied away from lamb. Don't know why. Watched Wolfgang grill one this morning and it looked interesting.
 
What is matambre's?

We spent a bit of time stuffing pork loins. Do you have a stuffed roast in mind?

I just thought a good brain wracking was in order, just to get a new "thing" going in Summer 2007.

Matambre
  • 1 flanksteak (1-1/2 to 1-3/4 pounds)
  • 1/2 red bell pepper
  • 1/2 green bell pepper
  • a 6 ounce piece of romano cheese
  • a 6 ounce piece of kielbasa sausage
  • 2 hard cooked eggs, peeled and cooled (optional)
  • 1 long carrot, trimmed and peeled
  • salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon each dried oregano and sage
  • 6 thin slices of bacon
1. Set the grill up for direct grilling and preheat to medium-low.
2. Butterfly the flanksteak: Place the steak at the edge of a cutting board, short side toward you. Using a long slender knife, butterfly the meat, that is cut it almost in half through the narrow edge of the long side and open it up as you would a book. Pound it flat with the side of a meat cleaver. The idea is to obtain a square of meat that's 12 to 15 inches long and wide. Breathe a sigh of relief: the hard part is over.
3. Core and seed the peppers and cut into 1/2 inch strips. Cut the cheese and sausage lengthwise into 1/2 inch thick strips. Cut the eggs lengthwise in quarters. Cut the carrot lengthwise in quarters. Arrange the bacon strips, leaving 1 inch between each, on a large (24 by 24 inch) rectangle of heavy-duty foil. (The strips should run parallel to the bottom edge of the cutting board.) Place the flanksteak on top of the bacon, so that the grain of the meat runs parallel to the bacon.
4. Generously season the meat with salt and pepper and sprinkle with oregano and sage. Arrange strips of sausage in a neat row, end to end, along the edge of the meat closest to you. Place a row of red bell pepper strips next to it. Then a row of cheese strips, then carrot strips, then green bell pepper strips, then hard cooked eggs. Repeat the process until all the ingredients for the filling are used up. Leave the last 3 inches of meat uncovered.
5. Starting at the edge closest to you and using the foil to help you, roll up the meat with the filling to make a compact roll. It's a lot like rolling a jelly roll. Pin the top edge shut with metal skewers or tie the matambre closed with a few lengths of butchers string. Encase the roll in foil, twisting the ends to make what will look like a large sausage. Poke a few holes in the foil at each end to release the steam.
6. Place the matambre over the heat and cook until very tender, 1-1/2 to 2 hours, turning often. If it starts to burn, reduce the heat to low or move the matambre to a portion of the grill with no coals under it. To test for doneness, insert a metal skewer. It should pierce the meat easily and be piping hot to the touch. Transfer the matambre to a cutting board and let cool for 30 minutes. Remove the foil and skewers or string. Cut the roll widthwise into 1-inch slices. Sample Recipe from
Barbecue! Bible Sauces, Rubs, and Marinades, Bastes, Butters & Glazes
 
I have a hankering to do something with Lamb on the smoker, and a guy from work raves about New Zealand lamb that he buys in Vancouver Canada. He's Fijian/Indian and does it on a grill. How hard is it to bone a leg of lamb?

Brian
 
I have a hankering to do something with Lamb on the smoker, and a guy from work raves about New Zealand lamb that he buys in Vancouver Canada. He's Fijian/Indian and does it on a grill. How hard is it to bone a leg of lamb?

Brian

You just kind of work your way around. I use a small fillet knife. I think it's easier to start at the big end. Feel for the bone before you cut.

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Stuff and re-assemble and you are ready to go.

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Hell Gary, I'm so bored with the "regular" items, I might just go dig up some lamb.

Honestly though, this has me thinking (with 3eye pics) that maybe its time for me to expand the horizons a bit.

I really enjoy watching Emiril with the Duck breasts. Maybe they need a try?
 
Chi Bill, just go get a new cooker. Then anything you cook, will be like new.
 
I am just headed out to pick up a brisket and try homemade pastrami for the first time. I've bacon down to a science.
 
Chi Bill, just go get a new cooker. Then anything you cook, will be like new.

No, thats not it.

A pork butt is a pork butt, don't matter how its done.

I just need something new.

Maybe, for me, its time to try the buckboard bacon thing. Its a pretty long process, for me, but maybe thats what I need?
 
No, thats not it.

A pork butt is a pork butt, don't matter how its done.

I just need something new.

Maybe, for me, its time to try the buckboard bacon thing. Its a pretty long process, for me, but maybe thats what I need?


I hear you. I need a new "thing" to cook. The lamb may have been a stretch, but I am reaching.
 
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