Lawd have mercy that looks good
Bell Tower Grey said:
Final product
Sauce side is a mix of Mild Bone Suckin Sauce, A-1, a little brown sugar and some melted butter.
Bell Tower Grey said:
Final product
Sauce side is a mix of Mild Bone Suckin Sauce, A-1, a little brown sugar and some melted butter.
It DOES look great.JocoPack said:Bell Tower Grey said:
Final product
Sauce side is a mix of Mild Bone Suckin Sauce, A-1, a little brown sugar and some melted butter.
Looks great BTG. Sounds like a good sauce mix. Hard to beat Bone Suckin Sauce.
'Please tell me more about this sauce if you will. I'm about to go to Amazon to order a couple of grill & smoker items that I need, and I may add the sauce to my order.FlossyDFlynt said:
Having lived in KC for a few years, I am a HUGE fan of Gates Extra Hot BBQ sauce. I still order it off Amazon as I havent seen it in stores here
Bell Tower Grey said:
Final product
Sauce side is a mix of Mild Bone Suckin Sauce, A-1, a little brown sugar and some melted butter.
Yes. I put it in small serving containers warm. Like the cocktail sauce at Sunnyside Oyster Bar.Tootie4Pack said:Bell Tower Grey said:
Final product
Sauce side is a mix of Mild Bone Suckin Sauce, A-1, a little brown sugar and some melted butter.
BTG, after you mix your side sauce, do you warm it in a pan first ? Thanks.
Do you brine your birds, even the whole ones, before you cook them?packgrad said:
The Joetisserie is putting in work this evening. 2nd go with it. First bird a couple weeks ago was good. Seasoned this one a bit differently and hoping for even better goodness.
Bell Tower Grey said:Do you brine your birds, even the whole ones, before you cook them?packgrad said:
The Joetisserie is putting in work this evening. 2nd go with it. First bird a couple weeks ago was good. Seasoned this one a bit differently and hoping for even better goodness.
packgrad said:Bell Tower Grey said:Do you brine your birds, even the whole ones, before you cook them?packgrad said:
The Joetisserie is putting in work this evening. 2nd go with it. First bird a couple weeks ago was good. Seasoned this one a bit differently and hoping for even better goodness.
I don't. Admittedly, I haven't tried brining a lot, but I've never noticed much of a difference when I do brine. Additionally I don't have the right Tupperware/plastic ware to brine bigger birds like a large chicken or turkey.
I will gladly accept correction if someone knows better. I don't do chicken as well as I do beef and pork.
Civilized...I cook turkey on our Holland Grill and I never brine. I cover the turkey with olive oil really good, including the cavity, and put salt and pepper on it, cook it 15 minutes per pound, and it is juicy and delicious. The indirect heat certainly helps to keep from drying out. I also check the temp about 20 minutes from the supposed being done time...usually is ready about 15-20 minutes early.Civilized said:packgrad said:Bell Tower Grey said:Do you brine your birds, even the whole ones, before you cook them?packgrad said:
The Joetisserie is putting in work this evening. 2nd go with it. First bird a couple weeks ago was good. Seasoned this one a bit differently and hoping for even better goodness.
I don't. Admittedly, I haven't tried brining a lot, but I've never noticed much of a difference when I do brine. Additionally I don't have the right Tupperware/plastic ware to brine bigger birds like a large chicken or turkey.
I will gladly accept correction if someone knows better. I don't do chicken as well as I do beef and pork.
Agree with this. I did a whole chicken tonight too, turned out great. I don't have a rotisserie though, that looks sweet. I just did mine on the grate.
I just slather with olive or avo oil, which I think helps to air fry the skin, and do a lot of salt and pepper. I roast around 400 degrees on indirect with a drip pan, takes around an hour give or take depending on the size of the bird. The one I had tonight was over 8 pounds so it took around an hour 20, which is on the long side.
I watch the temp pretty closely but but temps from 375-400 seem to work fine. With the oil on the skin and the higher heat, the skin crisps quickly and locks moisture in. Takes around an hour to cook and comes out with crispy golden brown skin and very juicy meat.
Long story short I've never seen any reason to brine, either.*
*ETA: for chicken no brining works fine. You've got to brine a turkey or it will come out like National Lampoon's. I know from experience, I ****ed that up bad one Thanksgiving several years ago. I stuffed it under the skin with butter thinking the fat would render in and would be enough. Wrong.
That looks awesome. I'm watching the Ballistic BBQ series right now, and one of his segments was a nice tomahawk that he grilled. How'd you season it?Steve Videtich said:
Pulled this together today! Hope everybody had a better Sunday!
Bell Tower Grey said:That looks awesome. I'm watching the Ballistic BBQ series right now, and one of his segments was a nice tomahawk that he grilled. How'd you season it?Steve Videtich said:
Pulled this together today! Hope everybody had a better Sunday!
Looks good BTG...I know you ain't talking about a hot bacon dressing similar to that at Rucker John's are you??Bell Tower Grey said:
Thought I'd do a little grilling before leaving for the beach. Gospel bird, on Tuesday, paired with garlic toasted rolls and spinach salad with hot bacon dressing.
All over itJocoPack said:Looks good BTG...I know you ain't talking about a hot bacon dressing similar to that at Rucker John's are you??Bell Tower Grey said:
Thought I'd do a little grilling before leaving for the beach. Gospel bird, on Tuesday, paired with garlic toasted rolls and spinach salad with hot bacon dressing.