Dread-headed Texan Posted Wednesday at 03:28 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:28 PM No, no, no that's not me lol. Im just getting started. I'm smart enough to know you don't jump right to an offset when you do. It takes time to learn to manage fire and if you're going to ruin the cook it's going to be because of improper fire management. So while waiting on my Traeger. I'll be curious to see what you guys and gals are grilling and any tips or suggestions on recipes to try. It is summertime after all, not much going on on the field, Lone Star Smokeout is happening in Dallas... So yeah what ya running and what ya grilling. 1 Quote
Deadhead_Horn Posted Wednesday at 03:40 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:40 PM Got a Traeger Pro. Not sure the model number, she is a medium size girl. I could never figure out how to use the app to check the internal temp. But pellet smoking is great. Very easy and the meat turns out great if you have the patience. I wouldn't start off with a brisket, I would go after an easier cut. 1 Quote
Dread-headed Texan Posted Wednesday at 03:46 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 03:46 PM I'm going ribs first and I'm waiting on the same grill. Inflation is too crazy for me to jump into the deep in with a brisket just to mess it up. Quote
ArizonaLonghorn Posted Wednesday at 04:54 PM Posted Wednesday at 04:54 PM Dread head meets Dead head - it's like Jerry Garcia jamming with Jimi Hendrix! 1 Quote
TexasMDcoach Posted Wednesday at 06:00 PM Posted Wednesday at 06:00 PM I have a 42-inch built in Alfresco grill/smoker which is a gas grill but does a great job. Also have a separate smoker which I frequently do ribs and brisket. Like to grill steaks which I season (salt and pepper (on I like Cosmos steak seasoning) and then cook on the grill to about 125 degrees and then transfer onto a iron skillet which I set in the grill. I put butter, garlic and herbs (Thyme or Rosemary) and spoon this over and under the meat generously several times with that and then take it out and let it rest. I have done steaks numerous different ways, but this method has produced the best results according to my palate. 1 Quote
Deadhead_Horn Posted Wednesday at 06:45 PM Posted Wednesday at 06:45 PM 1 hour ago, ArizonaLonghorn said: Dread head meets Dead head - it's like Jerry Garcia jamming with Jimi Hendrix! This is what I am here for! 1 Quote
marathon Posted Wednesday at 07:33 PM Posted Wednesday at 07:33 PM I thought this was going to be a post about Lincoln Riley. 1 Quote
Oldest Horn Posted Wednesday at 09:41 PM Posted Wednesday at 09:41 PM If you're new to smoking, port (Ribs, Butt) is easier to work with than beef brisket. 2 Quote
Oldest Horn Posted Wednesday at 09:43 PM Posted Wednesday at 09:43 PM 3 hours ago, TexasMDcoach said: I have a 42-inch built in Alfresco grill/smoker which is a gas grill but does a great job. Also have a separate smoker which I frequently do ribs and brisket. Like to grill steaks which I season (salt and pepper (on I like Cosmos steak seasoning) and then cook on the grill to about 125 degrees and then transfer onto a iron skillet which I set in the grill. I put butter, garlic and herbs (Thyme or Rosemary) and spoon this over and under the meat generously several times with that and then take it out and let it rest. I have done steaks numerous different ways, but this method has produced the best results according to my palate. I've got the same, the tray does a nice job of adding smoke when you're grilling but it doesn't do a good job with slow and slow like an offset or a kamado. The solid fuel insert is fun to use too. And the rotisserie is outstanding. 1 Quote
horns96 Posted Thursday at 02:42 AM Posted Thursday at 02:42 AM Large BGE and a Original PK. @Dread-headed Texan if you're just starting out, try pork butt/ pulled pork, hard to screw up too badly. Highly recommend carbon steel inserts from The Burn Shop for any grill. The Burn Shop Grill Grates 1 Quote
HuntFishTexan Posted Thursday at 01:52 PM Posted Thursday at 01:52 PM Agree with the others. Pork butt would be a great place to start, and allow you to get used to your smoker while having a great, low risk meal for quite a few meals folks. Subscribe to the Meat Church YouTube channel. He has some great stuff on there Quote
Austalgia Posted Thursday at 02:41 PM Posted Thursday at 02:41 PM I have the XXL big green egg. I use lump charcoal and some wood and occasionally some lump charcoal logs my wife bought online from Japan (those last days, don’t know what is in them). Also have an Argentinian grill with a box below and mechanism I can hang meat and lower it to the coals. Also a Traeger at the RV, and kettle Weber. Pizza oven and a table top balckstone. Whew! 😅. You asked. Right now I use the BGE the most, I start a nice fire then get it to coals and you can do most anything. For the Traeger chicken on the bone (about 40 min 300) and pork tenderloins (45/50 min 350) , pork chops (less time just watch these depending on thickness 300) come out nice. You can do a brisket for sure because you can keep such a consistent heat with the Traeger (it’s cheating but who cares), make sure your brisket is about 1 1/2 to 2 inch thick with consistent thickness to the point. Trim excess fat to 1/4 inch or less. Olive oil salt and pepper brisket (kosher salt and cracked peeper best, a lot of it. You can add some coffee grounds and paprika if you want to get fancy. Cook on 275 for 4/5 hours just on the grates, spray with water or apple cider vinager q1 hour, cover with butcher paper after 4 hours and cook 8/9 more hours check internal temp with probe at end last hour to get brisket to 190/200 temp then cut off. You want brisket at 204 temp at the end after rest. So know it will still cook after you take it off and rest. Eat it soon and you will be golden. 1 Quote
GPW Horn Posted Thursday at 04:37 PM Posted Thursday at 04:37 PM Beef Dino Ribs smoked on a custom vertical offset … thread needed pictures 😎 2 Quote
GPW Horn Posted Thursday at 04:39 PM Posted Thursday at 04:39 PM And apologies for crashing a grilling thread with low slow smoke pics 😎 Quote
Itsamystery Posted Thursday at 05:59 PM Posted Thursday at 05:59 PM Traeger has done and is scheduled for a road show at Costco locations. Bought mine there and the pricing was a bit better. When we moved, I gave away my offset and about half a cord of pecan and oak. Could hardly get anyone to come take away the wood for free. My daughter got me a collapsible tub and the blanket bag from Drip EZ. Love the blanket bag for letting meat rest. Keeps the temps up. Quote
harveycmd Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago I have about an 80 gallon barrel pit smoker I welded out of eight gauge steel. It's a single stack three inch adjustable smoker. I'm using a mixture of oak and cedar to smoke sausage from the wild hog I killed last week. Quote
GDI Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago On 5/15/2025 at 11:37 AM, GPW Horn said: Beef Dino Ribs smoked on a custom vertical offset … thread needed pictures 😎 With a rig like that I would imagine somewhere in the past you had a horizontal offset woodburner. I so how do they compare? I'm thinking about Lone Star Grillz vertical offset. Quote
Thanos72 Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago (edited) On 5/14/2025 at 11:40 AM, Deadhead_Horn said: Got a Traeger Pro. Not sure the model number, she is a medium size girl. I could never figure out how to use the app to check the internal temp. But pellet smoking is great. Very easy and the meat turns out great if you have the patience. I wouldn't start off with a brisket, I would go after an easier cut. My traager pro never smokes. I’m googled, you tubed, ai’d, etc. reprimed. What is the trick to smoke? I get a very small and inconsistent puff. Any tips would help. Edited 11 hours ago by Thanos72 Quote
GPW Horn Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 6 hours ago, GDI said: With a rig like that I would imagine somewhere in the past you had a horizontal offset woodburner. I so how do they compare? I'm thinking about Lone Star Grillz vertical offset. The horizontal offset is about 3yards to the left 😎 the vertical smoker is more of a bbq roasting rig, has a tendency to run a little hotter. The horizontal is a Texas Pit Crafters from Tomball Quote
bourbasted Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago (edited) This is my setup here in Brisbane, Australia. I used to compete around the country (Team name, Horns Up BBQ), but since COVID, have done more for personal events and a few pubs near my home. Always happy to share recipes. If I were starting all over again, I'd highly recommend going with pulled pork for a very forgiving cut and if you fear ruining a brisket, start with beef ribs, as they are much more uniform in thickness and will get a consistent result with great flavour. For beef, keep it simple. Salt, pepper and a bit of paprika will give you great bark. Spritz with half/half ratio of apple juice and apple cider vinegar about every hour. For pork, go crazy with flavours, but I generally stay around a nice vinegar bbq sauce with a bit of honey and a cherry rub off the shelf. I like the Elk Creek stuff. Lastly, I finally gave in and got a Traeger. It's a great piece of kit. I name my pits. The trailer smoker is Stevie Ray Gnawin' and the Traeger (not pictured) is Grillie Nelson. Edited 4 hours ago by bourbasted 1 Quote
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