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My beautiful Weber!

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My beautiful Weber!

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Old 7th Apr 2020, 07:46
  #1961 (permalink)  
 
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Dragged our charcoal powered orb out at the weekend as part of the ongoing battle against having bored kids.
Somehow the ideal of a long languid afternoon of slow cooked food, beers and convivial (immediate family) company is never achieved, the reality being more light, shout at kids for fighting near the bbq, food on, shout at kids for fighting near the bbq, food off, shout at kids for fighting at the table, eat, shout at kids for fighting near the bbq, give up and go watch tv.
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Old 7th Apr 2020, 21:19
  #1962 (permalink)  
 
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Fair Weather Weber-queing

It's gotten sufficiently fair enough in Seattle, believe it or not, to fire up the Weber (22") for smoking ribs. Ahhhhh the aroma.
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Old 8th Apr 2020, 07:29
  #1963 (permalink)  
 
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Sunday saw the mighty Karcher powered up to spring clean the Smokey Joe and 22" correctly powered Webers. Unfortunately the sack of correct fuel I had squirrelled away was a tad damp and needed some TLC, but with some perseverance performed as advertised. Just a basic burger, brattie and marinated chicken meal was cooked but the aroma of the correct fuel was welcomed.
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Old 8th Apr 2020, 08:47
  #1964 (permalink)  
 
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The breath of Satan's nether regions shall power Tartare Towers outdoor incineration device, as we in the Antipodes turn clocks back, pull out the warm clothes, and watch the darkness descend.
And only metres away shall smoulder the family Chimnea, happily lighting the gloom, banishing ye virus and merrily contributing to climate change.
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Old 8th Apr 2020, 11:02
  #1965 (permalink)  
 
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Nothing Wrong with a good bit of horse meat

Ah Beagle alright for the likes of you posh kids from Zummerset, me who grew up on the wild edges of Dartmoor our primary school seemed to be always served lunches frequently composed of a meat known as beef olives which by popular consent were definitely horse meat
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Old 8th Apr 2020, 19:47
  #1966 (permalink)  
 
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First confirmed horsemeat I ever had was in Northern Italy (was it Verona? Vicenza? I forget) in the mid 90's.
It was most excellent.
But as with anything else, one needs to cook a piece of meat properly ... and since they didn't use a Weber. ... just kidding.
It was on a great big rotisserie of some sort. (Arrosto?)
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Old 2nd Jul 2020, 10:14
  #1967 (permalink)  
 
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Last week,when the UK temperatures soared, we had another BBQ using the 29-year-old Weber 22.5 inch One-touch, with lumpwood charcoal, and a very pleasant meal it was too! This year I have started using these Weber kettle BBQ char-baskets, and have found them to be very useful for control of indirect cooking, i.e. cooking with the food not directly above the charcoal.

Sit these two char-baskets on the periphery of the charcoal grill i.e. below the food grill, and cook the food in the centre of the food grill, whilst catching all the dripping fat in a foil tray sat between the char-baskets. If you need your burger pattie or sausage a bit more charred, just move it directly over one of the char-baskets!

The char-baskets are a bit pricey, but I still recommend them. Those with some decent tools and a bit of DIY skill could probably knock their own up quite easily for a lot cheaper?
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Old 2nd Jul 2020, 13:46
  #1968 (permalink)  
 
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Howzit, MrB? Those charcoal holders look good, but pretty expensive?

Mine's only an 18.5 in model, but I just leave the indirect wire things in place and put the lumpwood charcoal either in the centre for direct cooking or outside for indirect. They work just fine!

Weber have stopped making the excellent ash catching device on 18.5s - heaven knows why. Only that useless hub cap thing and 3 finger biting wore clips now.

Fired it up yesterday evening - as quick and easy as ever!
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Old 2nd Jul 2020, 19:23
  #1969 (permalink)  
 
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Beagle: the 3 finger biters are meant to be rotated, not attacked. And the useless hubcap, battered and filthy, soldiers on. 25 years if a day, under thechipped bright red orb with gash thermometer.
I know how it feels.
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Old 2nd Jul 2020, 19:30
  #1970 (permalink)  
 
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Slight thread drift:
For a long time I'd only heard of the 'Big Green Egg' - but lately they've started to show up in the local stores and I'm curious. What makes them so desirable to justify the huge price premium over a similar sized Weber? Yes, they appear to be very well made and should last forever (assuming you don't drop it), but does it make outdoor cooking that much easier or better?
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Old 2nd Jul 2020, 22:12
  #1971 (permalink)  
 
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Not heard of the aforesaid egg but to my simple mind the essence of a BBQ is simplicity. Weber [battered or otherwise] for leisurely, pre-planned and best; gas [beagle look the other way] for spontaneous, short notice, I'm starving. The gas one is equally battered, the inside only sanitised by application of heat.
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Old 3rd Jul 2020, 04:10
  #1972 (permalink)  
 
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Easier in that it's usually dead easy to keep a low and stable temperature for ages without having to resort to building a snake in the weber. Just pile in the charcoal, light it in one spot and as it comes up to temperature just shut the vents down for a stable cook. I've got a Chargriller Akorn and 10+ hours cooking without having to bother with adding any coal makes pulled pork and similar easily done.
And on the other side of the spectrum you can get them screamin hot if you want to by just leaving the vents open.
Usually hold moisture better too so generally no need to add a waterpan.

Hassle with them is that it's real hard to get the temperature down if you overshoot as they are so well insulated. And they can crack if you let the temperature go up or down too fast.
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Old 3rd Jul 2020, 07:45
  #1973 (permalink)  
 
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Well if people think that Webers are pricey, that Big Green Egg is considerably more so! I mean around £700 for the smallest?

Getting the back orb fired up really doesn't take that long! Always close all vents after the previous session, so that there'll still be some charcoal left. A quick whizz over with a trowel to remove most of the ash on the coals, riddle with the propeller thingy, empty the cack catcher and you're ready to go again. A single firelighter, some fresh lumpwood and a squirt of starter gel. Then scrap the grille with a wire brush before lighting (only needs one match normally). It only takes about 25 minutes to get the coals up to temperature, which is about the same time as it takes to down a decent sized G&T (80 ml gin, lots of ice, wedge of pink grapefruit and a 150 ml can of Schweppes)!
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Old 3rd Jul 2020, 20:20
  #1974 (permalink)  
 
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I swear by my Weber chimney starter. Never a drop of fluid needed. Pile it full, stand it over a lit firelighter (or even just paper) on the bottom grille and come back 10-15mins later to something a blacksmith could work with. Tip it out, top grille on, cook. If feeling bold you can sear bits of steak or tuna over the ‘furnace’ before tipping it out. It transformed my BBQ experience!
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Old 4th Jul 2020, 09:42
  #1975 (permalink)  
 
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One more vote for the chimney starter here: 25 minutes max from lighting to having the grill hot enough to cook. Also, I read on another forum that kitchen roll soaked in cooking oil works well if no firelighters are to hand.
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Old 4th Jul 2020, 17:09
  #1976 (permalink)  
 
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Originally Posted by BEagle
Howzit, MrB? Those charcoal holders look good, but pretty expensive?
Greetings, Beags! Yep, as I wrote in my earlier post they are a bit pricey, but given how much money I haven't spent during lockdown, I thought "Ahhhhh, what the heck!" and bought them! (And this despite my employer reducing my salary by half for April and May ...)

Originally Posted by BEagle
Mine's only an 18.5 in model, but I just leave the indirect wire things in place and put the lumpwood charcoal either in the centre for direct cooking or outside for indirect. They work just fine!
I have a set of those "indirect wire things" too, but what I like about the char-baskets is the ability to move them around, if necessary, after cooking has started - push them together for a big direct cook, and push them apart again later if you want to. Not really practical to do that with the "indirect wire things".

Originally Posted by BEagle
Weber have stopped making the excellent ash catching device on 18.5s - heaven knows why. Only that useless hub cap thing and 3 finger biting wore clips now.
My 29 year-old Weber is the only one I have ever owned, and it only has the aluminium hubcap which, I agree, is not much cop, being too small and too shallow. Even in a slight breeze, any ashes that have been 'raked' into the hubcap just end up getting blown all over the place. Which seems to be another advantage of the char-baskets - they retain so much more of the ash during the cooking, so a lot less falls into the bottom of the kettle!

However, if I were to buy another Weber kettle, I would certainly go for the fancier ash catcher variety! We don't really need a BBQ the size of the 22.5 inch any more, and I dare say an 18.5 inch would be much better suited for cooking for two of us ...... but the requirement for a proper ash catcher would mean buying the 22.5 inch, which as you have mentioned before, means a bigger kettle space to heat up for cooking. C'est la vie! For laughs, I might just write to Weber and ask why the 18.5 inch kettle doesn't have the proper ash catcher any more.

Another slight issue with my elderly (but still in very good nick!) Weber is the third leg, the one not on the wheel axle - it occasionally tends to drop out at inopportune moments when moving the BBQ. The legs are only friction fit, but I see that later variants had a spring clip introduced at the top end of the leg to prevent just this sort of problem. So, just after the last barbeque I raided our recycling box, pulled out an empty Tiger beer can, cut out a strip of the aluminium, and shimmed the third leg into place - much better now, ha ha!

Originally Posted by tdracer
Slight thread drift:
For a long time I'd only heard of the 'Big Green Egg' - but lately they've started to show up in the local stores and I'm curious. What makes them so desirable to justify the huge price premium over a similar sized Weber? Yes, they appear to be very well made and should last forever (assuming you don't drop it), but does it make outdoor cooking that much easier or better?
I'd never heard of them until now. Had a look at the website, and concluded that is just stupid money. Probably priced to appeal to those who believe that, unless items are expensive, they probably aren't good quality? I wouldn't pay it, anyway, as there is there is much better value available out there, without having to resort to cheap, and I think my 29 year-old Weber kettle is testament to that!

Originally Posted by SnowFella
Easier in that it's usually dead easy to keep a low and stable temperature for ages without having to resort to building a snake in the weber. Just pile in the charcoal, light it in one spot and as it comes up to temperature just shut the vents down for a stable cook. I've got a Chargriller Akorn and 10+ hours cooking without having to bother with adding any coal makes pulled pork and similar easily done.
And on the other side of the spectrum you can get them screamin hot if you want to by just leaving the vents open.
Usually hold moisture better too so generally no need to add a waterpan.
I have had success with cooking and smoking whole chickens using the Weber kettle! Though it takes a few hours, and needs a couple of small additions of charcoal and wood chips, the heat can be controlled nicely with the top and bottom vents, and the kettle lid helps to retain moisture. Does a good job!

Originally Posted by Easy Street
I swear by my Weber chimney starter. Never a drop of fluid needed. Pile it full, stand it over a lit firelighter (or even just paper) on the bottom grille and come back 10-15mins later to something a blacksmith could work with. Tip it out, top grille on, cook. If feeling bold you can sear bits of steak or tuna over the ‘furnace’ before tipping it out. It transformed my BBQ experience!
The Weber chimney starter is another gizmo that I bought this year and, I agree, it gets the charcoal going in no time flat!
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Old 5th Jul 2020, 07:49
  #1977 (permalink)  
 
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MrB, I e-mailed Weber and asked them to reconsider an 18.5" model with ash catcher, but just received a "We will bear your suggestion in mind" response - a TVM & PFO e-mail!

Weber wobbly leg syndrome is a known malady, but in my case the socket rusted so badly that the old Weber had to go when I could see daylight through the bottom!

Let's hope the weather-guessers can conjure up some fine Wx again soon - I'm fed up with this wind and rain!
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Old 5th Jul 2020, 09:56
  #1978 (permalink)  
 
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What goes around comes around. Forty years ago at Rheindahlen the de rigueur starter aid for the Portadown Way Wednesday evening Weber gathering was a catering size baked bean can, courtesy of the mess kitchen, with both ends cut out. Excellent VFM even if it had to be replaced every 4 or 5 years.
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Old 5th Jul 2020, 14:43
  #1979 (permalink)  
 
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Back in the day when I could buy "quality coffee" in a two-pound can, that's what I cut the top and bottom out of and punched some holes in the side. Cheap, worked great, only downside, no handle, so vise-grips.
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Old 5th Jul 2020, 14:51
  #1980 (permalink)  
 
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Originally Posted by Paying Guest
What goes around comes around. Forty years ago at Rheindahlen the de rigueur starter aid for the Portadown Way Wednesday evening Weber gathering was a catering size baked bean can, courtesy of the mess kitchen, with both ends cut out. Excellent VFM even if it had to be replaced every 4 or 5 years.
A fellow inmate!

Our first tour was in number 8, the second in the up-market number 13.
With a brake parachute for cover in the middle.
I remember the bean tin, black as sin.
And the third leg dropping off Webers.
And a certain Gp Capt specialising in eating an egg, shell and all.
Cheese bratties that were a health hazard when poked with a fork.
And Christmas with the fire engine.
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