• Responding to email notices you receive.
    **************************************************
    In short, DON'T! Email notices are to ONLY alert you of a reply to your private message or your ad on this site. Replying to the email just wastes your time as it goes NOWHERE, and probably pisses off the person you thought you replied to when they think you just ignored them. So instead of complaining to me about your messages not being replied to from this site via email, please READ that email notice that plainly states what you need to do in order to reply to who you are trying to converse with.

  • IMPORTANT! PLEASE READ!! About the Google Adsense ads being displayed

    =====================
    Posted 08/15/2025
    =====================


    Yeah, I know. They are a pain in the butt. But they pay the bills to keep my server running. Just a fact of life, I am afraid.

    Want to get rid of them? Simple. Just become a Contributor level member or above and they will be gone. -> Please click HERE."

    Is that too much for me to ask of you to keep this site running? Well, sorry about that. I too wish I could get everything for free. But alas.....

    =====================
    Addendum: 01/10/2026
    =====================


    Google Adsense ad revenue for December, 2025 was just $30 over the cost of the lease for the server running this site. So, in effect, the money providing the incentive for me to continue running this site is coming SOLELY from the paid memberships and sponsorships here. Which honestly ain't much....

Smoked BBQ on a Gas Grill

Matt2979

My dawg has the bluuues.
Joined
Jun 27, 2009
Messages
3,599
Reaction score
328
Points
0
Age
57
Location
Kennesaw, GA
About 25 years ago I made some great tuna steaks on a gas grill. Those turned out nice, but since then, charcoal is the only type of grill that I've cooked on. This year, on Memorial Day Weekend, my wife and I bought our first gas grill. I've cooked LOTS of good food on it since then, but I missed that smokey flavor from the charcoal.

Several weeks ago I tried my first attempt at smoking a pork butt. (For those that don't know, a "pork butt" is actually part of the shoulder, aka boston butt). I started it at a few minutes shy of 0900 and at 1830 (aka dinner time) it still wasn't ready. I upped my temps to finish it up. Taste was great, but had to be sliced (I was after pulled pork).

Last Sunday I tried again with a 10.69 pork shoulder. Results were much better!

First of all, my recipe:

...really not much of a "recipe" to this. First ingredient is beer (to be explained later). Take your choice of seasonings (i.e. salt, pepper, chili powder, cumin, garlic, paprika, etc) and create a dry rub to suit your taste (I prefer mine to have a little bit of a bite so I prefer more hot pepper than some folks). Last night my wife cheated and used a product called "Butt Rub". I'll know this evening if I'm willing to recommend it or not.

Remove the meat from it's packaging, rinse well, pat down with a paper towel and then rub down with the seasonings. Don't be afraid to really apply some pressure and work the seasonings into the skin. (IMO) it's much better to cook with the most fat on top so orient it in the plate when rubbing it down. This helps the sleepy cook to put it on the grill in the dark! :D

Let the rubbed down meat sit in the fridge overnight (covered). In the morning (the bigger the meat, the earlier you'll want to start), it will be ready to slide directly onto the grill. Also, soak your wood chips in water overnight. For pork, I prefer to use apple wood, but again, whatever suits your preference (cherry, apple, mesquite, and hickory all do great, IMO). I've also found the bigger chunks smoke better, quicker and longer than the smaller chips.

This morning I put a 7.59 lb boston butt on the grill. I fired up the grill at 0530 (all burners), placed my pans of wood chips directly on the outer burners. I removed 1 of my 2 grill-grates and slid the 1 into the middle of the grill, covering burners #2 & #3 (it's a 4-burner grill). After letting it reach nearly 700 degrees (was only 10 minutes), I placed the butt on the grate, centered in the middle of the grill, and turned down the 2 burners beneath it, as low as they would go. After 10-15 minutes, I turned those 2 middle burners off, and then turned the 2 outer burners down to low (all the way down).

For the first couple of hours, I mopped the entire piece of meat with apple cider vinegar about every 15-20 minutes to help ensure that it didn't dry out too early. Pay special attention to the ends and any cracks developing, but coat the whole thing. Be careful not to apply too much pressure and remove your dry rub.

For the first 3-3 1/2 hours, I maintained my temps between 310-340. After that, I turned off 1 burner, and kept the best smoking pan of chips on the opposite burner (1 that was off). This helps to maintain more consistent smoke by having 1 of the 2 pans always smoking. It also produces some heat on the "off" side of the meat to keep things more even. The slower you cook this, the better.

Where I screwed up with my first roast was not letting it get hot enough. I got it to at least 175, which was a nice, safe temp to eat pork. But in order to make "pulled pork", you need to hit an internal temp of 190. At 190 the connective tissues start to break down and basically dissolve.

The shoulder last week smoked from 0430 until just after 1630 (just over 12 hours). I removed it from the grill and covered it with a couple of layers of foil, and let it "rest" for over half an hour. When I uncovered it and removed that big piece of skin (on the should, but the butt doesn't have the skin), everything beneath it just fell apart. No knife needed. Just reach in and grab meat and it comes apart! Even better, it melted in my mouth like nothing I had ever eaten. I put BBQ sauce on my plate out of habit, but ended up using it on my bread and homemade potato chips.

Below is a pic from the shoulder, and several of today's butt in progress.

Last week's 10.69 lb shoulder (only pic that I took of that one, right after placing it on the hot grill)

DSCN1229.jpg

This morning after cooking for about 2 hours

DSCN1300.jpg

About 4 hours and 10 minutes in

DSCN1303.jpg

7 hours

DSCN1308.jpg

Looks good enough to eat...right?

DSCN1311.jpg

Not hardly ready yet! ...this is where the beer is added to the recipe! :D

DSCN1313.jpg


More pics to come as this cut of meat continues to slowly cook and become more and more infused with the flavor of smoking apple wood!!
 
just courious how long are you soaking the wood chips in water, i have foud that if you soak them for about 20 minutes before hand you get a better smoke produced. also i would move all your chips to one side of the bbg you'll get a better smoke flavor. also get a bbg thermastat/ timer they have a prope like the ones for reptile use. use that, and you will not have to open the lid and loose the smokey flavor that you loose when the smoke escapes...
 
just courious how long are you soaking the wood chips in water, i have foud that if you soak them for about 20 minutes before hand you get a better smoke produced. also i would move all your chips to one side of the bbg you'll get a better smoke flavor. also get a bbg thermastat/ timer they have a prope like the ones for reptile use. use that, and you will not have to open the lid and loose the smokey flavor that you loose when the smoke escapes...

I'm soaking my chips overnight. I've found that smoking the small chips for anything less than 2-3 hours, and they burn up too quickly. But I've also decided (just in the last 2 "smoking experiences", including today) that I really like the bigger chunks of wood MUCH better than the small chips.

I also discovered that keeping a pan of chips on either side to be better. Rather than let one burn down and replace it with another new one, I just keep adding chips, allowing one side to really smoke while the other heats back up.

But as far as a digital thermometer that I can leave in the grill, I'm actually looking for one. For now, I'm only using the thermometer that is attached to the top. I'd like to know a more accurate temp, especially when cooking for 12 hours or more. But there is no smoky flavor lost. I've actually been able to keep it MUCH more consistent today, after trying several different methods on a grill that's not even built for holding in all that smoke.
 
This--at least to me--looks and smells SO incredibly good that I'm having a hard time leaving it alone!

At 9 hours it was showing signs of taking too long to reach temp if I only left the 1 burner on
DSCN1314.jpg


so I turned on the other outside burner and at 11 hours, the cooler side was up to:
DSCN1315.jpg

...but that was only on the cooler side. The hotter side had already reached 200 so I turned that burner off!

Looks good so hopefully I didn't leave the first burner on too long!

I put the warmer rack back in and have put 2 ears of corn that I soaked for the last few hours. Other than soaking, nothing has to be done to the corn. The husk will hold all that moisture in, and in about 1 1/2 to 2 hours at a low to low-med temp, the kernels will be so plump and tender!!

DSCN1317.jpg
 
Well, it turned out good, but after picking it apart, I realized that I had cooked it with the fat under it. It's better on top because as it melts over the rest of the meat, it just makes it so juicy. Oh well. I did figure out how to keep my smoke more consistent so the next one will be even better.

Add some baked beans, corn cooked in it's own husk on the same grill, drop biscuits and a cold beer. This is how I celebrate Labor Day Weekend (and any other weekend that I'm able to, too!!). :D

DSCN1318.jpg


DSCN1339.jpg
 
That is a BBQ 'work of art'. Good tip about soaking wood chips thank you, I've not done that.
 
Back
Top