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zurek

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  1. Start with something forgiving, like a whole chicken - this was my first cook and although my temps fluctuated greatly(would go up to 320F after adding a new log) the meat that came off blew my mind - juicest chicken I ever had. I was hooked! Spatchcock it, generously cover with favourite rub and enjoy! If you need any help, shout! been cooking on it for ages now. PS. paint on the firebox will burn off in the centre - don't get scared that's normal. You can eventually sand it and spray it with high heat black paint or leave as is but season the bare metal with veg oil to limit rusting. Happy smoking!
  2. After using the offset for nearly a year now I think I have a decent handle on maintaining temps/clean fire. I start off with a bed of lump wood and use quarter splits of whatever wood I have (currently mostly olive and cherry) approx every 40mins. After numerous cooks I'm happy enough with it, especially for the price I paid. Whoever said the learning curve on an offset, especially a cheap one, is steep was definitely on the ball, but nothing like trial and error and now no brisket will scare me 😅
  3. Yeah had same problem with length of spacers but I used 3 nuts together instead of it. In terms of the gap at the back, didn't do anything permanent yet, just stuffed it with thick aluminium foil, kinda rolled it up towards the gap and it sealed it nicely. Hope this helps
  4. I got it in Homebase. It's last year's stock so it was heavily discounted. Not every store will have it.
  5. So here's a few pics of the Firebox and main chamber. The charcoal rack in the main part is movable up and down, so I had an idea to turn it upside down and hang just above the inlet from fire box, suppose to spread heat more evenly and hopefully run a bit cooler so I can put larger wood chunks and not worry about going too hot. Haven't tested it yet though. What you guys think? I literally have 99% of those videos saved and watched. They're extremely helpful! Most though deal with what to do if your temp is not high enough, I must be the only one with the opposite problem 🤦‍♂️ The amount of fuel is defo going to make the difference, and will do 1 small chunk at a time, just wanted to get to a place where I can add a big enough log and manage temps then with the vents.
  6. Thanks, will take a pic tomorrow. Didn't change anything inside, no baffle plates or any modifications. So I knew before buying that the thermometer is rubbish, serves more as a decoration. Got a Thermopro TP17 with a grill clip and I go by this. Just for some reason I assumed I'm gonna have the opposite problem in the beginning, not enough heat. Wasn't expecting too much to be the case. Thanks both!
  7. Ok so a good few curve balls alright! Applied silicone and stove tape as I was building so joints are pretty sealed up. Gap at the back of the chamber is too big for tape to seal, will have to figure something out, it leaks like crazy. Main problem - runs really hot First burn I got excited and dunked a full chimney of briquettes followed by a half split oak log. The temp SKYROCKETED to 280c so clearly too much fuel. Today I started it off with half chimney and a fist size chunk cut from the log. Even with that the temp seems to go above 140c and have to keep adding same sized chunks every 15mins. I can bring it down to 120 ish but only for short amount of time. What am I doing wrong? Can't be going this hot with just a tiny bit of wood!? Seen people use big logs on similar sized offsets?! Thanks!
  8. Thanks a mil. I went with the Chargriller. Heavy bastard! I will be setting it up tomorrow, both heat silicone and stove tape arrived from Amazon already. I think I have enough theoretical knowledge to get started, we'll see what curve balls will reality throw at me 😂 Also, I'm having trouble finding proper smoking wood at the moment, for obvious reasons and was wondering if Kiln Dried Hardwood logs from Homebase be suitable for smoking. I have no idea what wood is it, looks Birchy to me, but no clue😂 Thanks again
  9. Completely new to posting on the forum, but have been lurking around for some time. I want to get into offset smoking, I think that it's a great way to learn. Someone said if you can master offsets, you will be able to smoke on anything. I can get either Char-Griller Outlaw(with Firebox) or the Landmann Kentucky for a very good price. The Char-Griller is approx. £70 more expensive so my question is, is it worth the extra spend in terms of built quality, metal thickness etc? I know they're very much starter smokers and will have to do some modifications to either one of them but for pure out-of-the-box quality, which one would you recommend? Thanks a lot!
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