Photography

Updates and pictures and a smoker!

Woot!  Lots of stuff to update today.  First, Jenny and I went to Linn Run state park a few weeks ago, and we had a great time.  It was cold outside, but we ate our picnic lunch anyway and went on a short hike.  We had initially intended to head up to a trail up the mountain a bit, but a young couple had slipped and perished at the bottom of a long drop earlier in the day there.  We didn’t know that until we got close and a ranger turned us away, of course.  We decided instead to hike a shorter loop trail in the park itself that was supposed to lead to a small waterfall. As you might be able to see here, we found it.  🙂  We took a bunch of pictures while there, too. 

In other news, I bought a real live smoker.  I decided to try an experiment last summer, and I started to learn how to smoke food.  I have a Weber kettle grill as our normal grill at home.  With a little bit of work, one can smoke pretty well in one of these.  I decided to give it a shot.  I did a pork butt first, and it turned out pretty good.  Actually, it turned out tasting great, but there were a few prep steps that would have made it better, and it would have been better if I could have cooked it more slowly.  It took eight hours as it was, but it probably would have done well with 10.  The result was meat that was still a shade tougher than I wanted, but it tasted great.  The next experiment was at a party with my friend Nick, where I smoked a pork shoulder.  This turned out better, as I had a better idea for what I was doing.  Then, for thanksgiving, I smoked one of the turkey breasts for dinner at my parents’ house.  That turned out great.  All this time, I have been wanting a real smoker.  The kettle grill did pretty well, but food configurations and fuel run times were somewhat limited by its size. 

Enter the Weber Smokey Mountain cooker, a purpose-built smoker with two food grates to handle a lot of food, and a giant charcoal chamber that can supply low and slow heat for 12+ hours.  This is such a popular and nearly fool-proof unit that it has its own fan site with lots of good recipes and cooking information:  The Virtual Weber Bullet.

weber_parts.JPGWith the shower fast approaching, and with it the need for me to smoke a lot of chicken, I finally had good reason to go ahead and make the jump.  Shown here are some of the parts that go into the WSM. 

weber_assembled.JPGNow, to the right, you can see the unit assembled with its lid.  It has a ton of space in it.  I should be able to do eight chicken halves at once in here.  I need to do about 18 chicken halves, so this should make that go pretty quickly.  I could even do two more at a time on the regular grill, but I think I’m going to avoid that for consistency’s sake. 

I’m excited to try this out before the shower.  I think I might do a beef brisket at some point–maybe next weekend.  That’s a 10+ hour cook, usually, so I’ll plan to start it one evening and let it cook all through the night.  Worst-case scenario is that I’ll be ordering pizza for both of us the next day.  🙂 

jonathan

Jonathan does a lot of stuff. If you ask Jenny, maybe he does too much stuff.