Here is a video of the unboxing.
One thing that I didn't know until the day after ordering was that the smoker itself does not come with any of the required bisquettes, so I ordered a variety pack which was set to be delivered the day after the smoker itself. I had intended on smoking a whole chicken, had it prepped, rubbed and ready to go. Unfortunately the bisquettes didn't come until late in the evening so I had to go ahead and just roast the chicken in the oven rather than let it sit overnight with the rub. Still wanting to make sue of the smoker I went out the next morning and picked up some baby back ribs.
Preparation was simple, I pulled the membrane off the bottom of the rack of ribs and liberally applied a rub (salt, pepper, sugar, paprika, cayenne pepper, celery salt, lemon pepper) then allowed it to sit for a few hours in the refrigerator. While the ribs rested I set up the smoker, turned it on and put in 5 bisquettes for the seasoning process. That involved about an hour of smoke at temperature to drive off any manufacturing residues and get the smoker ready for business.
The night before I had run all the removable pans, grates and bowls through the dishwasher. Assembly of the smoker is pretty easy, the drip pan goes on the bottom and a water filled metal bowl is put in place. The water-filled bowl is there to catch the still smoldering bisquettes as they are pushed off the heating element by the next one, this keeps ashes from flying up on tot he food. Above that is a heat deflector followed by up to four metal racks. The smoke generator slides in the side and attaches to a couple of metal pins, there is a power cord running to the smoke generator box and another running from that box to the smoking chamber for the main heating element. Controls are simple, just a power switch and a dial that allows you to set the temperature from low to high. There is also a button to advance the bisquettes. Once you get the smoker loaded and closed you'll have to baby the temperature a bit by adjusting the dial and top vent, but once you get it where you want it seems to be pretty stable. I put the ribs in and adjusted the temperature to about 225 degrees f. For smoke I used a mix of apple and mesquite bisquettes for the first few hours, then again for the last 20 minutes or so. All told the ribs were in the smoker for about 6 hours.
The ribs turned out pretty darn good, and since the smoker was running anyway I put the chicken I had roasted the night before in as well for a little smoke flavor. All in all I'm pretty happy with the Bradley smoker. I feel that I'll be able to do things with it that weren't possible with the old bullet smoker, like leaving it running unattended while I'm away at work or asleep for long cooks. In order to improve the temperature stability I'm looking at wiring up a PID controller with a thermocouple and solid state relay to let me dial in a desired temperature and not have to worry about overshooting it when I'm not around. Those parts should be here tomorrow. I'm thinking of picking up a bone-in pork shoulder roast for this weekend to make some barbecue pulled pork. Other things I want to try out before the end of summer is short ribs and eventually brisket. That was something I was afraid to even try with the bullet smoker, but now may be a possibility!
No comments:
Post a Comment