โNov-01-2015 05:24 AM
โNov-05-2015 03:27 PM
'15 Chevy Silverado 2500 HD
'18 Forest River Avenger :C "Dolci"
Kipor KGE3500Ti
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โNov-05-2015 05:20 AM
IAMICHABOD wrote:
It is really sad that same people always seem to hijack threads.
That being said,I love my Weber Q 220 and have done a lot of cooking on it in various ways. Like using using One of these I find that if you have something that has a marinade or sauce on it this will keep it from dripping away and make your food juicy and moist and you still get grill marks if you want them. Works great.
To slow some things down,like baking a chicken I take a throw away alum pan and make a rope of tin foil and snake it in the bottom then put another pan on top of that,season my chicken add some white wine and a veggie or two then crank up the grill with the lid closed until it hits about 400 degrees and put the chicken in,close the lid and wait about 20 min. then open it to see if the skin has browned,then turn it all the way down,close lid and let it bake until it reaches the correct temp on my remote thermometer. This makes a juicy and moist chicken.sjturbo wrote:
Thanks for the suggestions! My 1200 is a bit smaller but the baking idea with the rope and wine sounds very interesting! The tin foil pans come indifferent sizes so that also may get some experimentation! Thanks again!!
โNov-05-2015 05:20 AM
โNov-04-2015 10:26 PM
โNov-04-2015 01:40 PM
IAMICHABOD wrote:
It is really sad that same people always seem to hijack threads.
That being said,I love my Weber Q 220 and have done a lot of cooking on it in various ways. Like using using One of these I find that if you have something that has a marinade or sauce on it this will keep it from dripping away and make your food juicy and moist and you still get grill marks if you want them. Works great.
To slow some things down,like baking a chicken I take a throw away alum pan and make a rope of tin foil and snake it in the bottom then put another pan on top of that,season my chicken add some white wine and a veggie or two then crank up the grill with the lid closed until it hits about 400 degrees and put the chicken in,close the lid and wait about 20 min. then open it to see if the skin has browned,then turn it all the way down,close lid and let it bake until it reaches the correct temp on my remote thermometer.
Thanks for the suggestions! My 1200 is a bit smaller but the baking idea with the rope and wine sounds very interesting! The tin foil pans come indifferent sizes so that also may get some experimentation! Thanks again!!
This makes a juicy and moist chicken.
โNov-04-2015 11:08 AM
sjturbo wrote:
Everyone is entitled to their opinion! The crux of my inquiry was to get other recipe ideas from those who have been successful with their Q. I was not soliciting opinions regarding the quality, fit or purposing of the Q. Although I believe that everyone has an opinion I think the responses should focus on the original posted inquiry. As a member of various forums RV as well as other types. I always wondered why people stray from the original post. And, this is just my opinion.
โNov-04-2015 09:13 AM
โNov-04-2015 06:43 AM
โNov-04-2015 04:45 AM
magnusfide wrote:4X4Dodger wrote:Super_Dave wrote:
Dodger, you just have to think outside the box or have someone do it for you. It wouldn't be that hard to make some heat shields for half the cooking surface.
Well sometimes when you think outside the box, like your suggestion, you simply find yourself outside of the box.
Using a heat shield Will not result in the same cooking state as it does not lower the temp. a Shieled will just radiate much of the heat just protect it from the flame.
In indirect cooking especially of meats you want a lower temp for longer periods and of course you do not want heat of any kind radiating up directly on the food. This is the whole point of indirect cooking.
By shutting off half the burners you decrease the heat by a factor of from 50% to something else depending on how high you keep the other burners...You suggestion does not allow for this.
ME thinking outside the box is not the problem...the problem is Weber did not think outside the box.
Instead of complaining and hijacking someone else's thread, why not just go ahead and make the suggested modifications to take your preferred unit along? No one MADE you buy a Weber instead of following through on the modifications as you mentioned. We all understand you don't like the Weber so just sell it and take your other unit with you.sjturbo wrote:
I love my Weber Q (1200 size). Burgers, steak, corn, ect. turn out great. But I am looking to be a bit more adventurous and hoped some other Q owners had some suggestions? Anyone tried low and slow with one? Thanks!
SH, we enjoy our Weber too. Hopefully our suggestions for adapting recipes will be of use to you.
โNov-03-2015 10:02 AM
4X4Dodger wrote:Super_Dave wrote:
Dodger, you just have to think outside the box or have someone do it for you. It wouldn't be that hard to make some heat shields for half the cooking surface.
Well sometimes when you think outside the box, like your suggestion, you simply find yourself outside of the box.
Using a heat shield Will not result in the same cooking state as it does not lower the temp. a Shieled will just radiate much of the heat just protect it from the flame.
In indirect cooking especially of meats you want a lower temp for longer periods and of course you do not want heat of any kind radiating up directly on the food. This is the whole point of indirect cooking.
By shutting off half the burners you decrease the heat by a factor of from 50% to something else depending on how high you keep the other burners...You suggestion does not allow for this.
ME thinking outside the box is not the problem...the problem is Weber did not think outside the box.
sjturbo wrote:
I love my Weber Q (1200 size). Burgers, steak, corn, ect. turn out great. But I am looking to be a bit more adventurous and hoped some other Q owners had some suggestions? Anyone tried low and slow with one? Thanks!
โNov-03-2015 05:34 AM
Super_Dave wrote:
Dodger, you just have to think outside the box or have someone do it for you. It wouldn't be that hard to make some heat shields for half the cooking surface.
โNov-02-2015 07:18 AM
โNov-02-2015 07:03 AM
sjturbo wrote:
Thanks for the varied inputs. It is true that you should not expect it to cook a three course meal but it does what it does very well. I was just looking for some "real world" ideas. I guess I should take Super Dave's advice and think outside the box and inside the Q.
โNov-02-2015 06:22 AM