So far my posts have been about places I’ve visited and the food I’ve had the chance to try, mostly BBQ. I don’t travel much in the dead of winter so my food experiences are usually not far from home, and today I’m going write about that very thing. Home Cooking!
If you are really into cooking, and I can tell from looking for recipes on line that many of those who share those recipes are really into cooking. AND really into “the tools of the trade”. Like what kitchen gadget don’t they have?
I love outdoor cooking, so I have a “few” ways to do that, mostly BBQ or grill. This winter I decided I better consolidate my outdoor appliances, having acquired a few taking up patio space. Just to be clear, I live in Oregon, and yes it rains here. Usually from about Halloween until sometime between Flag Day and the Fourth of July. December through March is our really wet season, the other months are our transition season between rain showers and OMG when is it ever going to rain!? AKA wildfire season. Sorry, I digress. Anyway, I took inventory and thought how can I combine some of this into one cooker?
Here’s the count; My main almost nightly cooking appliance is a Weber Geniuses natural gas grill (no running out of gas or going to fill bottles). Located just outside our kitchen, it’s an easy choice for a lot of what I do, fully equipped with various Lodge cast iron appliances for a variety of cooking styles.
Next down the line I have a Weber Smokefire pellet BBQ. It’s a regular “go to” whenever I want to add some smoke wood flavor to my cooking, usually I cook salmon or other fish, chicken, and sometimes pork or beef, although my family likes their steak seared so the gas grill usually gets the nod, however the Smokefire can heat up pretty hot.
Third on that (narrow) side patio is my old tried and true Weber kettle. My wife and son bought a rotisserie attachment for me ten years ago or so, I’ve had the kettle going on over twenty years. In fact I had to replace the coal baskets a few years go because the original baskets had just worn out. I reserve that one for rotisserie or BBQ chicken mostly, but I love the salmon and other foods, including veggies, cooked on the original Weber kettle. The thing is, It’s mostly a Saturday or Sunday go to, when I’m relaxing from work and have time to BBQ, because doing really good BBQ takes time.
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This past year I added two auxiliary tools to that side of the house, a Duxtop induction cooktop that sits on the side of the Geniuses and just this fall, a Weber Q electric grill that I’m still getting to know. Both of these are intended to travel with me in my Airstream Basecamp to use where we have electric service to use instead of gas inside. Did I mention I like cooking outdoors? BTW, I also have a Weber Smoky Joe Hibachi style charcoal grill for the road and campfire gear including my Lodge Dutch Oven.
On the other side of the house is our outdoor living area, fully covered with a large dining table and casual furniture for lounging. We placed a natural gas fire pit in the “living room” space for those cool evenings. Bonus feature! It has a swing out grill on it that was designed to be able to grill food on or put a Dutch oven or pan on if you like. I haven’t done so, no need I guess.
Just on the side of the living room space I have a Gozney Dome pizza oven. Since we had the natural gas plumbed in on that side as well, I ordered the duel fuel, so for the quick cooking I fire it up with gas, and when I want to get adventurous I can cook with wood, which gets hotter than natural gas. When the pandemic hit and we were stuck at home is when I really started ramping up the outdoor cooking beyond what I had done in the past. Maybe obsessive?
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Next down that line I have a PK Original grill and smoker. I bought that at the start of the pandemic after I read an article in Food and Wine about outdoor smokers. I’ve really enjoyed cooking on that grill, it does and amazing job of smoking food. The grill space is a little smaller that I might like to have, but I’ve done pork roast, chicken, fish, and one of my favorites, St Louis style pork steaks. Slow smoked for a few hours, then basted and grilled over the high heat side for a short time to finish. What’s really cool about the PK is that I can break it down, so I’ve taken it along on camp trips and to my in-laws cabin to cook for them. I recently added the PK Go tailgate stand to make those trips even easier. PK did a great job designing and building this tailgate stand, and like the original grill that goes back in time, it should last for generations.
lastly, on that side and tucked away on the end I have a Lodge portable table that I bought for camping with a Lodge Hibachi grill sitting on top of it. I really like the looks and feel of the hibachi grill, but frankly it gets very little use. When I do make something that works on the small space and high heat, it’s fun to cook on. Again, this setup is really for camping because you can put hot coals on the table top for Dutch oven cooking and it’s all very portable.
So now for the solution! I got the bright idea that I could find a cooker that can consolidate some of these into one, do it all, space saving solution! So I started researching my options. I’d always thought I should have a Big Green Egg, but my wife and put her foot down and said No More! What about a smoker? That would be really cool. Real wood fire, slow, smoky flavor cooking. Real BBQ, you know like the Pit Masters! The Weber Smoke Mountain looked pretty good. It gets really good reviews, and it’s a little simpler than a wood burning fir pit. They come in three sizes and the 18 really started to stand out for me. That’s when I also came across the Weber Summit Kamado E6. Now that really looked like it could do the job for me. One hitch, it’s not exactly inexpensive, which was part of the objection to the Big Green Egg. This grill is portable, and comes with a side table like my old Weber kettle. The price got me looking back at the Smoky Mountain.
Which cookers could I let go? They’re like children! You love them all for their individual qualities and because they’ve been a key part of your life. OMG, I can’t believe I just did that! Really? Like kids? Anyway, maybe that’s a stretch. But like the kids, eventually they grow up and move away.
So I landed on the Weber Summit Kamado. It’s like having a Big Green Egg, a Weber kettle, and a PK smoker grill (sort of) all in one. Now comes the hard part. Guess which kids are leaving?! Well, my son wants the Weber kettle for his house, so he gets that grill. I’m “donating” the PK grill to the in-laws cabin, so no more toting it back and forth. And as for the rest? Well, you know I’m kinda attached to all of them so maybe I tuck away the Q and put it in the Airstream “ready to go”, and the Hibachi? ….you know, it’s kinda tucked away.
Happy Cooking!