First cook on #1636 with baby backs

alecksjaycubs

New member
Just finished with the results of our first cook. We had some baby backs in the freezer so we gave em a shot. They were great! We followed Big Poppa's video and they were super easy. My only wish is that I would have checked them at 1:15 into foil instead of 1:30. They were a little too tender. We used some Money Rub and a dash of a few rubs that came with the Mak. Obligatory pick of what was left...

image.jpg


The only thing I'd like to figure out is getting more smoke on 'em. Maybe start at a lower temp for smoke and ramp up? We're doing some butts tomorrow and I'm hoping for some photo contest goodness so wish me luck!
 

Chili Head

New member
How long did you run the MAK on "smoke" before you ramped up to cooking temp? I run mine an hour before I raise the temp to 250 to cook them.

I would eat those! Not bad at all!
 

alecksjaycubs

New member
Thanks! They did taste great. Especially when you compare it to what we used to try to do on our Weber propane grill. I followed the BP video and he didn't run on smoke first so I didn't either. Is running at SMOKE in the beginning a standard practice with the Mak? It makes sense to me, I just hadn't seen it done anywhere... even in the Mak videos. Any thoughts on how long to run on SMOKE for pork butts?
 

Chili Head

New member
Running on the smoke setting runs at a lower temp which creates more smoke . The longer your time on smoke the smokier you meat will be. For butts ill go a couple hours.
 

MAK DADDY

Moderator
It's all a matter of preference, experiment with different temps and wood flavors too.
From that Pic I wouldn't change a thing :)
 
Ribs look great. Can also order an A-MAZE-N tube smoker from BPS if you want more smoke. I have used mine on cooks where I want more smoke and it works well.
 

TentHunter

Moderator
For butts ill go a couple hours.

Same here, and I put them on while they and the grill are both still cold.

In cooler drier weather a water pan in the grill can help to keep moisture levels up which helps with smoke absorption as well as smoke ring. This can even be a small loaf pan or even a couple cans of water off to the side.

Another trick I like to use is to cut the butts in half which increases surface area for more smoke and more bark.
 
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