If your like me, and i hope you are, haha, then you like your grilled
or smoked food to taste clean and crisp. I have found that the original
Kingsford charcoal has way to many chemical binders and unwanted
material in it for my taste when it comes to smoking food. I
will use it for grilling foods since it does have a high heat capacity, and by the time its is scorching hot, the binders have burned off. The good news is, KF has been working hard to ensure there customers are happy. In the meantime i use Royal Oak lump or Stubbs all natural charcoal for slow cooking.
When i first stumbled upon a bag of Stubbs, i was pretty skeptical
due to the price and weight of the product. At 7.99 for a 15 pound bag
of 100% all natural hardwood briquettes with no chemical binders, i
admit that i was disappointed because i knew it was going to be a bad
day for cookin! Wow! was a wrong!. I am now a proud sponsor of Stubbs
charcoal. It is great for the smoker and the rotisserie on the kettle. I
have not used it for any grilling since i have Royal Oak 100% lump
charcoal from the good ole USA for that.
The overall size of each briquette averages out to be the same size
as KF Blue(Kingsford charcoal in the blue and white bag). Just by
looking at it, you can see the pieces of hardwoods they used for the
charcoal. Stubbs uses a vegetable binder(5% of product) to bind the
hardwood together.
I poured all 15 pounds(un-lit) into my fire basket of my drum smoker
and used one chimney full of lit charcoal to pour over the top of the
un-lit coals. I left the lid off of the drum and all 4 vents open to
bring her to temp. I have a drip pan in my smoker so i usually take her
temp up a little hotter. I like 300 at grate and that gives me about 250
or so above the drip pan for the food to cook. It has a we bit more
smoke upon ignition than i like, but after an extra 5 minutes, the nasty
white smoke was gone and i had a clean burning fire.I smoked some
chicken and country style butt ribs for 4 hours and then snuffed the
coal out my closing all the vents. After the smoker cooled down, I
investigated the remains of the fire basket. To my surprise, i had 85%
of the charcoal left.
As you can see, i had plenty of fuel left for my next cook, BUT i
dropped the drip pan with apple juice in the fuel. So now i have to wait
for it to dry out again… Anyway, i shook the loose ash off of the coal
and was very surprised at how little ash was produced after a 4 hour
cook.
In conclusion, i have really enjoyed this product. I now buy a bag or
two every time i go to Lowes. I hope others will try it out and see for
themselves how well it works for the grill and smoker!
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