Adding wood for more meat
Posted: 15 May 2013, 01:38
So, having bought a ProQ Excel 20 from Neil of the Royal Q towards the end of last summer, I'm finally getting the time to do some cooking with it!
So far, it's always cooked 1 meat at a time, be it Ribs, Butt etc., but this weekend I'm cooking for a few friends - I'll be starting off with a Boston Butt and then adding 4 racks of ribs later on; so here's my question:
Obviously, by the time I put the ribs on, the BB will have been cooking for a good few hours - Am I right to think that the Butt will have taken on all the smoke it can, roughly in hours 1 & 2, so when I add some more wood chunks for the ribs, it won't effect and over-smoke the butt?
Secondly, when it comes to reloading charcoal, what's the best method? Take the top stacker/s off and add a chimney/half chimney load of lumpwood charcoal as needed (thus causing a spike), or just add a chunk or so through the door every so often, starting a bit earlier?
Thanks in advance for the advice
So far, it's always cooked 1 meat at a time, be it Ribs, Butt etc., but this weekend I'm cooking for a few friends - I'll be starting off with a Boston Butt and then adding 4 racks of ribs later on; so here's my question:
Obviously, by the time I put the ribs on, the BB will have been cooking for a good few hours - Am I right to think that the Butt will have taken on all the smoke it can, roughly in hours 1 & 2, so when I add some more wood chunks for the ribs, it won't effect and over-smoke the butt?
Secondly, when it comes to reloading charcoal, what's the best method? Take the top stacker/s off and add a chimney/half chimney load of lumpwood charcoal as needed (thus causing a spike), or just add a chunk or so through the door every so often, starting a bit earlier?
Thanks in advance for the advice