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Which charcoal

Started by Joetee, April 19, 2017, 07:15:54 AM

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Joetee

Ok just looking though the posts it seems most use briqettes instead of natural charcoal.

So let's have a discussion on this topic.

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A good read
http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2013/05/24/186434261/the-great-charcoal-debate-briquettes-vs-lumps

Joetee

I bought a bag of this to try.

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captjoe06

I buy whatever is cheapest. I believe one of if the Statesmen has a saying that the meat tastes better cooked over less expensive Charcoal. I actually prefer the consistency of briquettes over lump for smoking. If I have lump on hand I'll use it when searing or reverse searing Ribeyes.

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Joetee

Oh I guess 20 yrs ago when I had a little charcoal grill, I think everyone used Kingsford. But I was never really concerned about charcoal and just used what ever.

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Lightning

For longer running cooking I frequently use briquettes, especially for smoking, but for anything hot and fast, I use lump charcoal.

Rub

Disclaimer up front - I am sponsored by Nature's Own. However I was using it way before I was sponsored by them.

I've been competing for 13 years in BBQ contests and tried a bunch of different briquettes and lumps. I have found I win the most when I use Nature's Own Maple Sugar Lump. I also use it when I compete in SCA steak cookoffs. It produces less ash, has a very mild aroma, and is very consistent for my needs. Plus it gets hotter than briquettes which is what I want when grilling steaks.
In the market for unicorns to complete my collection: Ambassador, Plainsman, Meat Cut, Custom, Blue 18 MBH, Green 18 MBH

Darko

That's my go to lump as well. I don't know if you are aware, but they are now making briquettes.

charred

99% of the time I use lump or a hardwood briq. Don't believe the myth that says lump can't smoke at steady temps. I think some folks don't pack the ring tight enough and so leave too many air pockets which cause temp fluctuations. Then again, I may be full of shit. :)

However, my 18.5 WSM will run just as steady w/ lump as w/ KBB.
hopelessly, helplessly, happily addicted to a shipload of Webers

toolhead

A good read is the recent thread on kcomp costco sale.

Im not doubting anyone's preference or experience with running even temps but for me i recently discovered a diff b/w even temps per my gauge and even cooking across grates on my wsm..theres a big diff...your them may read even but you have uneven zones across your grate....

This is very noticeable when you smoke jerky....probably less noticeable when smoking hunks of meat...

If you smoke jerky uneven temps across your grate is very noticeable   i solved this by using kcomp
Grills

toolhead

Theres always the big variable factor of technique...if you know how to work your preferred charcoal you can maximize your return of longevity and performance..but technique does exhaust a given fuels capabilities....theres a limit to each grade of fuels performance
Grills

Troy

I'm in between preferred brands right now.

In my grills I'm using lazarri lump, coshell briqs, stubbs, and weber briqs.
I do my absolute best to keep Kblue out of my grills, but lately I've been using more and more of it due to lack of sales and availability of better brands. The ash leftovers are ridiculous and the plume of start smoke isn't very inspiring.

In my smoker/wsm, I use Kblue almost exclusively - despite my issues with it. For long overnights and low and slow, it's hard to beat the price, availability, and consistency of kingsford.
However, I never add fresh unlit kingsford to a cooker with food already in it. I can taste the difference that the kingsford starting smoke adds, and I do not like it.

Vwbuggin64

Always Stubbs and/or Coshell. Tried others, but they are the most consistent for me.
Rollin coal

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Troy

Quote from: Vwbuggin64 on April 19, 2017, 04:35:48 PM
Always Stubbs and/or Coshell. Tried others, but they are the most consistent for me.

Have you noticed any change in the coshell recipe?
The last few bags I bought at OSH had a different briq shape. They smelled the same, but burned differently and left more ash than expected.
I also found a briq with a giant piece of wire in it...
I was very disappointed, but glad I only bought 2 bags (instead of 30, which is how many I bought last time I found it)

Groovinn

Royal Oak Chef Select Briquettes here. Consistent in smoke, flavor, heat and cost. Have tried Stubbs and Weber, but as stated before, we have developed a feel for using it.

kettlebb

Stubbs. Burns clean. No hesitation adding unlit coals to my cooker mid cook. Tried lump and didn't like the inconsistent sized pieces and quick burn.


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