There are a lot of people who think that by cooking hot and fast you seal the meat keeping more of the moisture in.KamadoSimon wrote:I guess there is a balance between low 'n' slow & retaining moisture versus higher heat & getting crispy skin?
A re-run of pork belly ribs & some other bits
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Swindon_Ed
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Re: A re-run of pork belly ribs & some other bits
I've never floured the skin before, but i normally brine them for 4hrs before air drying. So in the brine at 6pm out at 10pm rest them overnight.
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BBQFanatic
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Re: A re-run of pork belly ribs & some other bits
Air drying and flouring are both part of the process, but you wont get crispy skin without the ability to reduce the fat on the underside of the skin, this will only happy at high temperatures (350F-400F or higher). Flouring only really helps (IMHO), if you cook at high temps, the skin releases alot of fat, the combination of the chicken fat and flour gives a crispier outer skin (think deep fry kind of effect). In my experiments, flouring on smokes had little to no effect on the skin and I always ended up with the rubber skin.
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Re: A re-run of pork belly ribs & some other bits
Ok - thanks both - makes a lot of sense & explains why the drumsticks look anemic before I direct grilled
Will try indirect at 350-400 next then.
Cheers - Simon
Will try indirect at 350-400 next then.
Cheers - Simon