Took it off at 2pm at199f due to grumbling tummies - in total a 17 hour cook.
Not quite ready to pull but sliced nicely and was lovely and tender. Not crutching defo worth it for the great bark. It was a real success....and after the WSM 47 having been on for 18 hours at 225 to 250f I killed the fire and still have half a basket of coal left!! I love Aussie heat beads!
It's such a difference not crutching isn't it. Takes sooo long to cook though. My last TH butt took 24hrs! Cost a fortune in pellets. Great bark, but I won't be doing it again. Not at that price. Lol. About £16 in pellets! Might try in in high summer when nights really warm but not at this time of year.
BraaiMeesterWannabe wrote:....and after the WSM 47 having been on for 18 hours at 225 to 250f I killed the fire and still have half a basket of coal left!! I love Aussie heat beads!
In your 47 how many kg of heatbeads are you starting with please? Do you fill up quite proud of the charcoal ring? Also how big is your starter fire?
Just wondering if I can improve my own approach to longer cooks on my 57 version...
BraaiMeesterWannabe wrote:....and after the WSM 47 having been on for 18 hours at 225 to 250f I killed the fire and still have half a basket of coal left!! I love Aussie heat beads!
In your 47 how many kg of heatbeads are you starting with please? Do you fill up quite proud of the charcoal ring? Also how big is your starter fire?
Just wondering if I can improve my own approach to longer cooks on my 57 version...
Not sure on the kg's as it's been so long since I started with all fresh coals. I fill basket to the rim of the ring (no higher) and then removed the coals from the centre (creating a crater down to bottom) and put these in my chimney starter. Probably 1/3 of a large chimney starter.