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Brinkman

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Posts posted by Brinkman

  1. On 9/1/2018 at 6:11 PM, May the Sauce be with you said:

    Hi everyone, 

    Just a quick question about the Landmann Kentucky which is currently on sale at Homebase for £100. I was definitely going to buy one (for low and slow as i have pretty good gas grill already) but after doing a bit of research  I'm confused. Some websites have the Kentucky as recommended but others dont and you guys seem to have modified them to make them work properly. I'm fine to add some heat rope if needed but don't really want to have to do too much. Also I don't really want to spend £250 on a WSM or Pro Q Frontier.  So basically do you think the Kentucky worth it for £100?

    It's only an opinion and only mine but I don't think it makes so much difference, as far as mods are concerned, whether you spend £100 or £900. I run an Oklahoma Joe Highland and I needed to spend another £100+ on mods, most were DIY, before I got it working as it needed to! I could have gone on spending 100s but that applies to every hobby out there. I think you need to look at what you want the item for, will you only smoke or will you also use the cooking chamber as a grill? How often you are going to use it! For £300 and up you get a decent offset with average thickness of metal with a shorter life span but jump to £500+ and you have 8mm thick steel which is going to last a long long time and the only part likely to fail will be the firebox due solely to heat! The 3-4mm units, £100+, will give you a good few years of use and if you are learning then that may be the way to go! Who wants to spend big money on an item that may end up as a garden ornament? As a final thought the OHJ weighs in at some 14 stone and if you shop around you can find them for as low as £400+ they will still need those mods so be prepared to spend. Is it worth spending more than £100+ on a offset? Only the buyer can decide that one. Hope this info helps.

    • Like 1
  2. 1 minute ago, May the Sauce be with you said:

    OK this is based on the traditional Moroccan style of Mechoui Lamb. It's fantastic on lamb leg or shoulder. It makes a good amount of rub.The good thing is it works well as a marinade too you just mix with 50g of butter or olive oil.

    2 tablespoons ground coriander

    1-2 tablespoons ground cumin

    2 teaspoon paprika

    1 teaspoon cayenne pepper

    1 teaspoon dried thyme

    1 teaspoon garlic powder

    1 tablespoon salt

    Pepper to taste - I put in half teaspoon

    If you try it i hope you like it. 

    Cheers,

    Wayne

    Well thank you very much indeed for that Wayne, it looks to be a proper good un, I'll be giving it a go Tuesday as I'm not one for letting the grass grow under a lamb!!? 

  3. 1 hour ago, Smokin Monkey said:

    Very interesting idea, could be used interested in a punt!

    Thank you, I have some of my very best ideas when left alone in a dark room! ? I was thinking of a minimum investment of, oh shall we call it £10.00

    I imagine theres plenty enough holes to go round? 

  4. Cheers MTSBWU

    I was looking for something other than the garlic & rosemary route as I tend to do that on a regular basis! If you can let me have the details of the Moroccan rub that would be terrific. The memsahib is on my case for always doing pork or beef since I started smoking and she has made it perfectly clear I need to change my ways pretty damn fast. I'd already decided to butterfly the leg and grill this one though I did smoke a half leg, using cherry wood, last week and being small it took very little time and so stayed very moist?

    Look forward to receiving the Moroccan recipe with great anticipation and may I welcome you to the mad world of smoking...

  5. Having had time on my hands over the weekend I set about making some pellet tubes, these are no ordinary pellet tubes, these are organic tubes without the need to fill with pellets!

    I'll be floating the idea on Dragons Den in due course but if anybody would like to get in on the ground floor and crowd fund then please let me know. By the way, some people have called them logs with holes in but they are not visionary's like myself!?

    1usepellettube.jpg

    • Haha 1
  6. I was very very close Ice! It was that or anything from Blackadder. My wife thinks its a bigger money pit than my love of American muscle cars! Not even close is the truth but I'm not gonna let her know what I spend on them, well the bits and bobs anyway. She's not speaking to me at the moment because I've just taken delivery, on Friday, of the new 2017/18 Dodge Charger, wanted the 2018/19 but Europe have refused it a certificate due to its 700bhp and side wings (down force). ?

  7. Just back from a 70 birthday party? The hosts decided to cook an enormous hunk of pork in the Aga which ended up on the plate looking very sad indeed! Dry, very very dry, but my heart lifted when I saw ? the crackling!! Man alive it was salty? I've now had six pints of water and I'm still thirsty! The only way to get the pork down was to smother it in the home made apple sauce, which to be honest was very very nice. By the way, this was a relative of mine so I'm allowed to criticise. This grilling/smoking business has spoiled me! Oh and guests kept coming up to me and asking the most ridiculous questions about smoking! My relative had told them I was into smoking food and these people sat around looking at me and muttering? Is this normal I ask members of the forum? I ask this question of the long term smokers but please, new members, offer you're  experience's. Tell me, am I to suffer this at any and every future event I attend? Are we, as smokers, that strange a breed??

  8. 1 hour ago, Justin said:

    Wonder if thete is recipe to make myself. Must be.

    I make mine spicy because thats the way I roll but here is a very basic recipe. I've omitted the Sriracha sauce in case nobody likes the heat. 

    Cut up and stir in bananas, to vinegar, honey, rum, tomato paste, soy sauce, and salt; bring to simmer. Reduce heat to low, cover, and cook for 15 minutes, stirring often. Remove from heat and let cool for 10 minutes. Transfer ketchup to a food processor fitted with a steel blade and process until smooth, about 1 minute. Enjoy or not as the fancy takes you..

    • Like 2
  9. Hi Justin I find the trouble with using a generic red meat rub is they tend to be both sweet and spicy! Not what I was looking for with lamb but then I didn't want just a plain old mint based rub which may work well but are a bit boring!

  10. I know this post was a long while ago but this is a sauce I like and use on a regular basis, I do tend to like it spicy, but obviously its just a case of adjusting.

    This sauce is not for cooking with, it is used only as a condiment to mainly pulled pork or beef. If you don't care for heat then adjust to suit the ones in red.

    3 tablespoons of Vegetable Oil - 1/2 Large Red Onion (finely diced) - 3 cloves of garlic (minced) - 1/2 a cup of tinned pineapple (finely diced) - 1/2 cup Banana Ketchup

    1/2 cup of tomato ketchup - 1/2 cup of Apple Cider vinegar - 3 tablespoons of Muscovado sugar - 1 tablespoon English Mustard - Fresh Ground Black Pepper (as much or as little as you want) - 2 tablespoon of Black Treacle - 3 tablespoons of Worcestershire Sauce - 2  tablespoons lemon juice - 1 tablespoon of soy sauce - 1 cup of water

    Heat oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Add onions and garlic and saute for few minutes until soft. Add the remaining ingredients, then continue to cook for 15 more minutes. Taste for seasoning and adjust individual ingredients to create a nice balance between the flavor elements.

    Allow to cool a bit. If a finer texture is desired, puree in a blender, then strain & store. Otherwise, after cool, store in an airtight container in the fridge.

    Even the wife likes this one on her pulled pork! High praise indeed I might add...?

  11. Cheers for that Ice. It will go into the bank for use either this time or another, I've been through everything I have and can't find anything either! You know, I think its maybe because most searches automatically go through Google and therefore only show up American BBQ sites? Americans are not big Lamb eaters, well they weren't when I lived there anyway. I think I may try prefixing any more searches for a Rub with either Australian or New Zealand Lamb and see if that throws anything up.

  12. Any of you guys and gals have a rub or marinade recipe for a leg of lamb that I think is going to be grilled, I may be tempted to smoke it if I can keep the memsahib out of the way long enough to get it on the smoker without her noticing! Though that does seem unlikely with her looking over my shoulder constantly!? 

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