great idea putting the jalapeno on top! I did some of these last year but they were a lot of work.
I didn’t think they were too bad overall since they only cook for like an hour. About 20 minutes or so to put together.
great idea putting the jalapeno on top! I did some of these last year but they were a lot of work.
Made some pig shots last night. They were bomb and will be making them again on Sunday.
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Debating which to do for the super bowl party I am going to. Either a brisket, ribs or pork belly burnt ends. Never made the pork belly burnt ends so kind of leaning that way. Ribs might dry out too much from getting off the smoker to getting to the party.
Nice! I'm literally planning to do these exact things on Sunday. Never done them before so looking forward to it.
We're also doing a homemade pizza for the game and I'm going to look into doing it on the pellet grill.
Same concept as you but used a full jalapeño. Cream cheese with my own BBQ rub. Grew the “fooled you” jalapeños. Just the right amount of heat. Just wore gloves when cleaning the seeds out.My only suggestion is to make sure you find meaty bacon. I had some that was unusable because it was mostly fat and made the “cup” too floppy to fill.
This look delicious. But I wouldn't be able to take a solid crap for a good 10 days after those.Same concept as you but used a full jalapeño. Cream cheese with my own BBQ rub. Grew the “fooled you” jalapeños. Just the right amount of heat. Just wore gloves when cleaning the seeds out.
Even split some poblanos
in this batch.
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Drizzled with bbq sauce during the smoking process. They were gone in minutes.
Chuck roast burnt ends? Do tell!I've done pork belly burnt ends before, loved them. Restaurant in Cedar Falls has them all the time and they are to die for, I'm always getting them.
Chuck roast burnt ends are also a really great option.
Here's my evolved recipe over the years for my Traeger. I still do Brisket about 90% of the time because I like the rest of the meat, but this works really well for "poor man's burnt ends".Chuck roast burnt ends? Do tell!
I'm smoking wings too. I usually pat them really dry, add the dry rub, and get onto the smoker at very low temp, like 180-200 tops, and let go for 2 hours. Then I pull the wings off, sauce them, and put them back onto the smoker and crank the heat up to at least 350 for maybe 20 minutes, this essentially bakes the sauce into them and gets them sticky. Down side is that they don't have that crispy skin, but I'm not sure how to get crispy skins with sauced wings. Either way, this system hasn't let me down, they usually turn out great.Smoking some wings for an impromptu party my wife decided to throw. Couple questions, do you guys normally sauce before or after, and what temp should I smoke them at?
Have you tried cubing ahead of cooking to cut down on time and increase smoke/rub surface area? That seems to be the way a lot of recipes do it these days.Here's my evolved recipe over the years for my Traeger. I still do Brisket about 90% of the time because I like the rest of the meat, but this works really well for "poor man's burnt ends".
Grill Temp: 250
Food Target: 203
Est Time: 8-10 hrs
Ingredient
Recipe/Instructions:
- 2x 2lbs Chuck Roast
- BBQ Sauce
- Brown Sugar
- Smoke at 250 until 165 internal temp.
- Wrap and cook until 203.
- Pull, unwrap, rest for 30 mins.
- Cut into cubes, rub with sauce and brown sugar.
- Place in foil pan uncovered and cook for 45 mins @ 300.
Do you marinade them at all?I'm smoking wings too. I usually pat them really dry, add the dry rub, and get onto the smoker at very low temp, like 180-200 tops, and let go for 2 hours. Then I pull the wings off, sauce them, and put them back onto the smoker and crank the heat up to at least 350 for maybe 20 minutes, this essentially bakes the sauce into them and gets them sticky. Down side is that they don't have that crispy skin, but I'm not sure how to get crispy skins with sauced wings. Either way, this system hasn't let me down, they usually turn out great.
Nope. I just pat them dry, put on the dry rub, and onto the smoker.Do you marinade them at all?
Thank you sir, your insight may have saved meNope. I just pat them dry, put on the dry rub, and onto the smoker.
This is the best method I've found, but I have such a small air fryer that it takes forever to finish themSeason then smoke your wings to not quite done (30-60 mins at 200-225F), then finish them at high temp in your air fryer for 5-10 mins. Then toss in your favorite sauce. You're welcome.
Barrows have more meat in the tummy than gilts. In the industry they used to be called F*cker muscles. If you go to a locker ask for a barrow not a gilt or if you have a friend take one to the locker for you. I look through all packages and sometimes pass on sale bacon and buy a belly with muscle.My only suggestion is to make sure you find meaty bacon. I had some that was unusable because it was mostly fat and made the “cup” too floppy to fill.