Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Foil Wrapped Potatoes and Peppers

Foil Wrapped Potatoes and Peppers

Review: 7/10 - these turned out exactly as expected and were tasty and fully cooked (not undercooked and hard or overcooked and mushy). The fact that these are wrapped in foil and only cook for a short time, there is no flavor added from the egg. These would have turned out the same if I put in the oven for 25 minutes at 400 degrees. I may try cooking them a different way on the egg in the future to try to get some crispiness and/or more flavor from the wood.


BGE Settings:
1. 400 degrees at indirect heat (use plate setter)

Ingredients:
1. Potatoes
2. Peppers
3. EVOO (Extra Virgin Olive Oil)
4. Half stick of butter
5. Seasonings (I used salt, pepper and Lowerys)


Recipe:

1. Slice potatoes
2. Slice peppers (I decided to use orange and green bell)
3. Lay a piece of foil down
4. Place potatoes and pepper on foil
5. Coat with olive oil, seasonings and slices of butter


6. Place another piece of foil (same as original size) on top
7. Roll/Fold each side at least 2 folds


8. Stabilize the BGE at 400 degrees on indirect heat
9. Cook for 25 minutes, flipping once halfway through


Happy Eggin...

Chris

Smoked Pork Loin x3

Big Green Egg - Smoked Pork Loin (3 recipes)

Review: 10/10!!! First BGE Adventure = SUCCESS! They turned out amazing! Everyone said it was the best pork they've ever had... No one even needed a knife - all 3 loins were so moist and tender, you could cut them with your fork and they literally melted in your mouth. I attribute the success to a couple factors....

1.  Pulling from the BGE right when they hit 145 internal meat temp. (The USDA changed the temp of pork from 160 to 145 in 2011 and what a difference 15 degrees makes)

2. FTC (Foil-Towel-Cooler) - I did this for 2.5 hours (putting a pot of boiling water in the cooler at the 1.5 hr mark to maintain heat) - they were still hot (maintained temp) after this time and I think it added to the moisture and tenderness

(Recipes at bottom)

Meats:
a. Jalapeno-Butter Injected Stuffed Pork Loin
b. Hot & Spicy Butter Injected Pork Loin
c. Bacon-Wrapped Brined Pork Loin

BGE Specific:
c. Big Green Egg, using plate setter for indirect heat
d. Goal: BGE dome temp - 200 deg. for ~6 hrs until meat temp is 145 deg.
(Lesson Learned: It took a little bit of work to keep it around 200 degrees - for 90% of the cook it remained between 200 and 240, sometimes more, sometimes less - it only took a little over 4 hours to get to meat temp of 145 deg)


As I mentioned in my first post, my brother-in-law gifted my wife and I with the large BGE for Christmas and we subsequently invited him over for New Years Eve to christen it.

He brought over a torque wrench to help finish the assembly and on his way over, stopped at the grocery store to purchase a meat (and a bag of lump charcoal) for us to grill (an add-on to his already amazing gift).

While, he had planned on getting a pork butt or shoulder, he found an amazing deal on pork loin and purchased a 10 lb pork loin.

Neither he, nor I, realized that loin is a very lean meat and not made for slow cooking (as it tends to dry out) and rather is best for a faster cooking time. However, both of us wanted to test one of the true benefits of the BGE (smoking and slow & low cooking) and were determined to make this work.

After extensive research, I decided I would go ahead with the loin and try to slow cook it, while maintaining flavor and moisture.

Here is my first attempt at the BGE


(Side note: I didn't determine I would start a blog until after the loins have been marinating for over 12 hours, so unfortunately the original prep work will be photo-less - this will not be a recurring theme, as I will try to photo all steps for future cooks)

1. I determined that the 10 lb loin would be to large for the egg (although I could have bent it to fit), but also wanted to try 3 different methods for 2 reasons. First, in case one of the methods fails (too dry, bad taste, etc), and second, to have a variety of flavors from the first BGE cook. So, I cut the loin into 3 different parts - the sirloin, the center cut, and the rib-end. (pic from internet)



The actual recipes (with pictures) are below, but here was my process:

1. Prepare each recipe and let marinate/brine for 18 hours
2. Remove meats and let sit at room temperature for 1 hour 
 3. Prepare the BGE by lighting the wood charcoal/wood chunks and get burning
4. Add plate setter and drip pan and pan with apple juice and apple cider vinegar
(Helpful hint: Place 4 stacks of 4 pennies on the plate center and then place the drip pan on the pennies - this prevents the drippings from burning too much from the direct heat)
5. Add meat to BGE
6. Stabilize dome temp to 200 deg - close top vent to a little more than a sliver open and bottom vent about 1/4" open
7. Grab a beer or Crown Royal and sit back and relax
8. After the internal temp of the meat reaches 145 degrees, remove and "FTC" (Foil-towel-cooler)
     a. Wrap the meat in foil, nice and good
     b. Wrap the foil in towels
     c. Place the towels in a cooler
     (If you want to keep the meat in FTC for more than 2 hours, pre-heat the cooler by placing a pan of boiling water on a towel in the cooler)
     (There are a lot of people that will FTC regardless of wait time, because it makes the meat moist and maintains the temperature - most will do it for a minimum of 30 minutes)

Recipe #1 - Jalapeno-Butter Injected Stuffed Pork Loin (center cut)



1. Cut the pork loin center-cut, using a C-cut method to essentially "unwrap" the meat https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eCpL6cj7Rw
2 Inject the meat with a half-jar of "Cajun Injector - Jalapeno Butter" marinade
3. Cover the meat with:
     a. Philadelphia Spicy Jalapeno Cream Cheese
     b. Apple Smoked Gouda Cheese (sliced thin from block)
     c. Chopped Pineapple
     d. Chopped Orange Bell Peppers
     e. Chopped Jalapeno Peppers (de-seeded)
     f. "Rub Some Butt" Seasoning
3.  Wrap the loin and tie with Butcher's twine (I asked the Safeway butcher for some and he obliged with a large amount for free)
4. Rub with "Rub Some Butt" Seasoning
5. Cover and refrigerate for 18 hours

Recipe #2 - Hot & Spicy Butter Pork Loin (rib end)

 
1. Inject the pork loin rib-end with "Cajun Injector - Hot & Spicy Butter"
2. Use about 3/4 of the jar to inject & use the rest + what escaped from injecting to marinade
3. Leave to marinate - cover and refrigerate for 18 hours

Recipe # 3 - Bacon-Wrapped Brined Pork Loin (sirloin)


1. Make a brine, using: (I didn't measure and simply eye-balled, but I will give estimates)
     a. 3/4 gallon of water
     b. 1/2 gallon of apple juice
     c. 1/2 cup of apple cider vinegar
     d. 1.5 cup of Morton's salt
     e. 1 cup sugar
     f. 3 tbsp black pepper
2. Marinate in the brine and refrigerate for 18 hours
3. Lattice thick-cut bacon and wrap the loin, then secure with butchers twine

I served with Foil Wrapped Potatoes and Peppers and Grilled Pineapple...


Happy Eggin...

Chris



Finally... I am a proud owner of THE Big Green Egg!

Santa must have had me on this Nice list this year!


Christmas morning, my wife and I were pleasantly surprised to open an excellent present from her brother - the Big Green Egg. (He actually had us open the nest, and left the actual Egg, etc. in the car)

We immediately made plans to christen the Egg on New Years Eve and invited him over to partake.

Here is a picture of my new Egg (Large Size), almost finished setting up. (Needed to wait for a torque wrench to arrive to finish)



"Aint she a beaut, Clark" - Cousin Eddie

I am really excited to start using the Egg and will be experimenting heavily until I consider myself to be a guru. (okay - I will be happy with expert level)

Anyhow, this blog will include all of my adventures of the BGE, including:

1. Recipes
2. Pictures (when remembered and possible)
3. Reviews

I welcome all input, advice and commentary...

I hope you enjoy this adventure and possibly gain something from it!

Also, "BGE" (as the community calls it) will be used in lieu of "Big Green Egg", henceforth.

Happy Eggin...

Chris