Dinner Tonight

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Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

BearDown89 wrote:
Longhorned wrote:Way to cook it up, BearDown89! Mass-produced foods are totally a legit cooking ingredient.

As for the huitlacoche, it's a food for everybody, not just an adventurous travel eater like BearDown89. It isn't strange, you don't have to "develop a taste for it", and it isn't sophisticated. It's just straight-on one of the great foods you've never tried. It's directly in everyone's taste profile already, at the level of comfort food.
Where do you find it? I'm certain the Albertson's here isn't going to have it in the produce section. Mexican market? Several of those around. Then how did you prep it? Just chop it up and sautee and use it like any old taco/quesadilla/burrito filling with fixins'?
That's a big question, BD. I usually just back into success while in the wrong gear, so I found it offered at a taqueria in Champaign, Illinois. I'd always thought I'd have to try it while traveling in Mexico, and all of the sudden there it was, and without any fanfare. The owners moved here from Mexico City, but they get their huitlacoche locally from corn farmers. Even everyday gardeners are "unfortunate" enough to encounter the "blight". My understanding is that you can buy it canned from Mexican grocers, and supposedly it's great canned, but I don't know anything about that. Either way, my understanding is that you saute it with garlic and onions.

I'm not sure what to do about it in Idaho, but on your next visit to Tucson it must exist. How could it be in Champaign and not Tucson? We didn't even get our first Mexican restaurant until 2009, and our first grocery in 2010. I suspect it's all over the place in Nogales.
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scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by scumdevils86 »

i've never seen it in tucson...but i've never specifically kept my eyes peeled for corn smut. i'm sure it is widely available here. mostly in canned form though i'm sure.
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Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

scumdevils86 wrote:i've never seen it in tucson...but i've never specifically kept my eyes peeled for corn smut. i'm sure it is widely available here. mostly in canned form though i'm sure.
Image

Also known as cuitlacoche.
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Merkin
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Merkin »

scumdevils86 wrote:
Longhorned wrote:
scumdevils86 wrote:Italian "stir fry". hot Italian chicken sausage with asparagus, red onion, garlic, bell pepper, yellow squash, zucchini, tomato, mushrooms, fresh basil, chili flakes, Italian seasoning, garlic, lemon juice and a splash of good balsamic. All sauteed together in one happy pot with some parmesan on top
With bread? Nothing starchy?
Nope. Its pretty healthy when I make it this way. Just a tablespoon or 2 of oil and the chicken sausage plus a ton of veggies. I would prefer pasta or bread of course but it is a filling meal without.

My dietitian says avoid starches, so I go breadless too. This is what I made the other night. And yes, my grill grates are really that dirty.

Image
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azgreg
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by azgreg »

With the heat I don't think it matters. Adds flavor.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by PieceOfMeat »

Merkin wrote:And yes, my grill grates are really that dirty.
Just extra flavor
It's long past time to bring this back to the court, let's do it with a small update:

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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

I think grill grates with build-up is appetizing. Those kebabs look fantastic. I guess it's spring.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by azgreg »

Merkin wrote: Image
I see some beef, green peppers, large cherry tomatoes?, what else?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

pearl onions and yellow peppers?
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Merkin
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Merkin »

Teriyaki chicken and pineapple chunks, no beef. Rest is correct.

Not authentic in any culture, but my kids like it.

Longhorned wrote:I think grill grates with build-up is appetizing. Those kebabs look fantastic. I guess it's spring.
It's always bbq weather where I live.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

It's not just the weather. Spring comes and I grill and make myself a margarita.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by BearDown89 »

Longhorned wrote:
scumdevils86 wrote:i've never seen it in tucson...but i've never specifically kept my eyes peeled for corn smut. i'm sure it is widely available here. mostly in canned form though i'm sure.
Image

Also known as cuitlacoche.
Wow. We have Herdez products here. I'll keep an eye out for it.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Made me some calimari with french fries. The wife is still away.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Spaghetti with sardines, grilled onions, green olives, capers, pan-roasted pine nuts, lemon zest, olive oil, fish sauce.
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scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by scumdevils86 »

Longhorned wrote:Spaghetti with sardines, grilled onions, green olives, capers, pan-roasted pine nuts, lemon zest, olive oil, fish sauce.
sounds awesome...have a recipe? or do you just fudge it?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

scumdevils86 wrote:
Longhorned wrote:Spaghetti with sardines, grilled onions, green olives, capers, pan-roasted pine nuts, lemon zest, olive oil, fish sauce.
sounds awesome...have a recipe? or do you just fudge it?
Yeah I based it on this...

http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1013 ... and-capers

... with the addition of pan-toasting some pine nuts and adding green olives and a little fish sauce at the end. And I didn't have parsley on hand.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by BearDown89 »

Three (3) chili cheese dogs made of the cheapest ingredients available.

Awaiting repercussions of my poor choices now.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

BearDown89 wrote:Three (3) chili cheese dogs made of the cheapest ingredients available.

Awaiting repercussions of my poor choices now.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by azgreg »

BearDown89 wrote:Three (3) chili cheese dogs made of the cheapest ingredients available.

Awaiting repercussions of my poor choices now.
From your colon?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by BearDown89 »

azgreg wrote:
BearDown89 wrote:Three (3) chili cheese dogs made of the cheapest ingredients available.

Awaiting repercussions of my poor choices now.
From your colon?
Longhorned wrote:
BearDown89 wrote:Three (3) chili cheese dogs made of the cheapest ingredients available.

Awaiting repercussions of my poor choices now.
Image
No regrets. No discernable repercussions.

What happened is that on Wednesday nights I have a guitar lesson with this cool grizzled old hippie who's been playing for over 50 years. He can be a first-class trip. Technically it's $20 for a half hour lesson, but we always end up hanging out for close to an hour. We generally chat about his various maladies and holistic remedies, talk about music, pluck around on the guitars. He plays lead while I strum some basic rythm or blues riff. He gives me something to work on for the week. Last week he greeted me with, "I'm stoned as a goat." It's my favorite hour of the week and $20 well spent regardless of my guitar playing progress. It's really up to me anyway. I mean, we talkin' 'bout practice . . .

Afterwards I typically stop at a little dive on the way home for a couple of frosty domestic $3 mini-pitchers. Sometimes the friendly Canadian GF joins me as she did last night. Except for the wings, the food is otherwise pretty mediocre at this place. I did, however, notice a variety of hot dog offerings on their menu board and it got me to thinking, but I didn't want to pay them $6.75 to make me a hot dog. It's really more about the frosty $3 mini-pitchers after my weekly music session with the trippy hippie.

So that's where the chili dogs came in last night when I got home. I generally save that meal for the MLB All Star Game in July, but given that the season is upon us and there was lots of baseball talk on sports radio yesterday it all came together nicely.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Norwegian fjord trout roasted with potatoes

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Image
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Chicat »

Shrimp & Sausage Gumbo
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by azgreg »

Swedish meatballs, garlic mashed potatoes, and mixed veggies.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Chicat wrote:Shrimp & Sausage Gumbo
Do you have skills from your time in New Orleans?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

azgreg wrote:Swedish meatballs, garlic mashed potatoes, and mixed veggies.
That's more work than I can give a weeknight.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by azgreg »

Longhorned wrote:
azgreg wrote:Swedish meatballs, garlic mashed potatoes, and mixed veggies.
That's more work than I can give a weeknight.
Had a craving.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by rgdeuce »

Anybody in here got a smoker? I've had my Pit Barrel about a year now and try to smoke something at least once a month, twice in a good month. Got my thermapen in today and am going to put it to work on a pork butt this weekend. Gonna try a new east North Carolina bbq sauce I have been dying to make too.

Outside of the gym, getting tanked and smoking some good bbq is the best release for me these days
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

rgdeuce wrote:Anybody in here got a smoker? I've had my Pit Barrel about a year now and try to smoke something at least once a month, twice in a good month. Got my thermapen in today and am going to put it to work on a pork butt this weekend. Gonna try a new east North Carolina bbq sauce I have been dying to make too.

Outside of the gym, getting tanked and smoking some good bbq is the best release for me these days
Definitely Merkin. I may be in the market for one. Not sure where to start. I don't need to smoke 35 pounds of meat at a time. But I looked into the Green Egg line and had some problems with those.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Merkin »

I do, but not as often as I like, but will be doing a ham for Easter. I switched from charcoal/oak to electric due to taking out my lawn and putting wood chips in. Start one fire and the wife never lets you forget it.

Does Dill post on the lower boards? Texans know how smoke and I think he has quite the setup IIRC from TOS.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Chicat »

I have a homemade smoker that my neighbor made. But sadly I only smoked something once (brisket). It was really good, and had some great bark to it, but holy crap it was a lot of work.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by rgdeuce »

Longhorned, I highly recommend the Pit Barrel. Numerous respected bbq websites rave about it, it's been named the best smoker under $500, etc. i believe it still has a 4.9 rating on Amazon too. Worth looking into, the guy who makes them puts his cell # on each unit and he actually answers. Really nice dude.

It's super easy. Takes no skill whatsoever. My first cook was three racks of ribs, first time I have ever smoked and they were "competition worthy" per my friend who does competitions. He has a couple of thousand invested in smokers and he now has a Pit Barrel and uses it more than his others now. I've put four or five other people onto it as well and they are happy.

It's set it and forget it. Consistent results and I was a beginner. $300.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Thanks, rg. That's exactly the one I was looking at most closely last summer. I first found it on a recommended list online. I like the look of it, too.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by rgdeuce »

First time smoking

Image

Tri-tip

Image

Thanksgiving Turkey

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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Longhorned wrote:Image[/url]image by offaluk, on Flickr[/img]
I did this slab on a regular Kingsford grill last summer, using a water pan and constantly managing the coals and firing new ones. Complete pain in the ass. The end product wasn't very good, either. It looks better than it was. That's when I knew that I can't get by with just a grill no matter what.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by BearDown89 »

Longhorned wrote:
Longhorned wrote:Image[/url]image by offaluk, on Flickr[/img]
I did this slab on a regular Kingsford grill last summer, using a water pan and constantly managing the coals and firing new ones. Complete pain in the ass. The end product wasn't very good, either. It looks better than it was. That's when I knew that I can't get by with just a grill no matter what.
I've been grilling over Kingsford charcoal on a Weber kettle for decades and I've got it down cold. I tried to smoke ribs last summer just as you've described and got the same exact results. Very disappointing after all that work and anticipation. This Pit Barrel looks promising and affordable to boot.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by ASUHATER! »

I'm full from dinner but I want some ribs now.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by azgreg »

ASUHATER! wrote:I'm full from dinner but I want some ribs now.
I'm looking at these pics at 5:48 in the morning and want some for breakfast.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Sorry, yeah, I meant a Weber grill.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by rgdeuce »

Yeah, once I get ribs on my mind I get antsy. Sometimes I will stop by Costco on my lunch break and pick up some racks and head home, throw them on real fast and let em smoke while I am teleworking. I wouldn't do it so much if it wasn't so easy. My wife had to intervene because I was spending $40-50 per week in meat to smoke.

The Pit Barrel dude has youtube videos if you haven't seen them to kind of gauge how damn easy this thing is. I can set up mine in 40 seconds, no lie.
For a rack of ribs:
1) dump kingsford in the basket til it fills even to the top. 2) soak the coals thoroughly with lighter fluid (it cooks off so no taste) or use a chimney 3) put basket in Pit Barrel and light 4) depending on your elevation, let the coals heat for 15 or 20 minutes (I believe 15 is for people at sea-level, he explains in his videos), after 20 I drop in a few chunks of apple wood or hickory wood 5) hang your ribs 6) put on the lid and look for something to do the next 3.5 hours.

At 3.5 hours i pull them and do the bend test to see if they are ready to go. Every once in a while, depending on the rack, sometimes they need 10-15 more. But typically 3.5 is the magic number here. I sauce them and hang them for 15 more minutes to let the sauce carmelize a little. Then pull em and let em rest.

Any time I am doing a new meat I will put in whatever the meat is and "pit barrel" in Youtube and someone has done it and has a video, usually him. I have not had one bad cook on this thing.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by UAdevil »

If you ever want badass beef ribs try this:

Get a cookie sheet or pan.
Fill with 1/4 inch water.
Get your rack of beef ribs, top with a little olive oil, season with whatever rub you like, wrap in foil and place in pan directly on top of the water.
Put in pre-heated oven set to 250 degrees.
Bake for 3 hours.
Remove from oven.
Finish the ribs on an open flame for 10 minutes or so, turning frequently.


The meat will fall right off the bones.
Love the 've! Stop with the: Would of - Could of - Should of - Must of - Might of
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

I like beef ribs. One more day of Lent and I'm there.

Cheese, bread, olives, and salad. The cheese was talegio and gorgonzola dolce.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Chicat »

Bistella, mechoui, cous-cous, and Moroccan carrot salad.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Chicat wrote:Bistella, mechoui, cous-cous, and Moroccan carrot salad.
I'm having trouble finding any lamb whatsoever for Easter.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Chicat »

Longhorned wrote:
Chicat wrote:Bistella, mechoui, cous-cous, and Moroccan carrot salad.
I'm having trouble finding any lamb whatsoever for Easter.
They have 10lb legs at my grocer but I went with the 2lb shanks. It was delicious.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Chicat wrote:
Longhorned wrote:
Chicat wrote:Bistella, mechoui, cous-cous, and Moroccan carrot salad.
I'm having trouble finding any lamb whatsoever for Easter.
They have 10lb legs at my grocer but I went with the 2lb shanks. It was delicious.
I don't get to choose where I live. But I'd buy a shank or shoulder for sure.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Reydituto »

Trader Joes makes a fresh ravioli with girasoli ricotta and lemon zest. Added a touch of lemon olive oil (EVOO crushed with california lemons), fresh basil and dried thai pepper flakes (both from the garden), a few runs of romano cheese along the microplane, a few grinds of my special salts and peppers mix (4 different salts, 4 different peppercorns, and dried chiltepines), and some canned (TJ's) sardines in harissa served over the top.

Never had a problem smoking with a weber grill when I had one, the side racks were the key, and the only pain was the fire maintenance, but the end product was always good.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Chicat »

Longhorned wrote:
Chicat wrote:
Longhorned wrote:
Chicat wrote:Bistella, mechoui, cous-cous, and Moroccan carrot salad.
I'm having trouble finding any lamb whatsoever for Easter.
They have 10lb legs at my grocer but I went with the 2lb shanks. It was delicious.
I don't get to choose where I live. But I'd buy a shank or shoulder for sure.
Time to move out of the sticks.

Oh wait, that's where I live too....
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Longhorned »

Reydituto wrote:Trader Joes makes a fresh ravioli with girasoli ricotta and lemon zest. Added a touch of lemon olive oil (EVOO crushed with california lemons), fresh basil and dried thai pepper flakes (both from the garden), a few runs of romano cheese along the microplane, a few grinds of my special salts and peppers mix (4 different salts, 4 different peppercorns, and dried chiltepines), and some canned (TJ's) sardines in harissa served over the top.

Never had a problem smoking with a weber grill when I had one, the side racks were the key, and the only pain was the fire maintenance, but the end product was always good.
I love those ravioli. I asked a great Italian cook, who used to sell fresh ravioli with ricotta and lemon in her store, what's the best way to serve it. She said with a sauce of tomato "molto semplice". So I did, and from then on I've loved what happens when cherry tomatoes meet lemon.

I hear what you're saying about the Weber. It's just that I can own a smoker for $300 that requires no effort at all.
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Chicat »

Where should I send it?

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Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: Dinner Tonight

Post by Gato Salvaje »

Longhorned wrote:
Reydituto wrote:Trader Joes makes a fresh ravioli with girasoli ricotta and lemon zest. Added a touch of lemon olive oil (EVOO crushed with california lemons), fresh basil and dried thai pepper flakes (both from the garden), a few runs of romano cheese along the microplane, a few grinds of my special salts and peppers mix (4 different salts, 4 different peppercorns, and dried chiltepines), and some canned (TJ's) sardines in harissa served over the top.

Never had a problem smoking with a weber grill when I had one, the side racks were the key, and the only pain was the fire maintenance, but the end product was always good.
I love those ravioli. I asked a great Italian cook, who used to sell fresh ravioli with ricotta and lemon in her store, what's the best way to serve it. She said with a sauce of tomato "molto semplice". So I did, and from then on I've loved what happens when cherry tomatoes meet lemon.

I hear what you're saying about the Weber. It's just that I can own a smoker for $300 that requires no effort at all.
I made a smoker out of a flower pot from home depot. Alton Brown had a show on it and you can find directions to make one easily on youtube. I think it cost me like 40-50 bucks total and works great. AB's theory being that nothing cooks meat like a pit in the earth, and the closest thing to that is a terracotta pot.
It's a fun little project to undertake anyway
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