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Barbecue Recipes and Barbecue
Chicken Recipes -Favorites
Thanksgiving
Turkey
Melt
2 sticks of butter in a saucepan; add 2 oz. garlic juice and 2 oz. onion
juice. Inject mixture
with syringe in all parts of turkey.
Place turkey in barbecue pit smoker on cooking sheet or foil at 200°F
for 12 hours. Enjoy a great
turkey !
Hound's
Spare Ribs
Start a fire in the firebox. While
you wait for the fire to reach temperature, wash and dry a rack of
untrimmed spare ribs. With a butter knife lift a corner of the
membrane on the bone side and grasp with a paper towel. Pull off
the membrane. Rub the rack with whatever rub you prefer and cook
bone side down in the barrel until the ribs crack
when folded end-to-end, about 6 hours @ 225°F. Editor's
Note: If you want to cook a large quantity then use a rib rack(s).
(Barbecue pit recipe was courtesy of Cuchulain Libby, who was a wonderful barbecue
chef and friend, a.k.a. "Hound").
Tejas
Dove
Remove
breast meat from breastbone of dove.
Season meat with garlic salt, black pepper, and paprika.
Wrap breast around ½ of a
jalapeno pepper, then wrap with a slice of bacon and pin with a
toothpick. Place on smoker at
225 °F for approximately
1 hour until done. (You
may substitute quail for dove.)
Tejas
Meat Rub
Blend
well the following ingredients and store in a closed container:
1/8 cup salt 1/8 cup chili
powder 1/4 cup
garlic powder
2 Tbsp cumin 1/4 cup paprika 1 Tbsp red pepper
1/4 cup coarse ground black pepper
Rub meats liberally with Tejas Meat Rub prior to cooking.
Jack's Mojo Chicken
Spatchcock chicken (cut the backbone out,
making two parallel cuts in the bird's back). Mash the bird flat to
break the breastbone. Mix all other ingredients as marinade.
Marinate chicken 24 hours in refrigerator. Reserve marinade, boil
thoroughly and serve as sauce over chicken and basmati rice as a side
dish. Grill chicken indirect on a medium-hot fire, starting breast
down for 10 minutes, then breast up until done. Cook until legs move
freely in the joints.
1 large broiler chicken
1/2 cup fresh lime juice 6 tbs olive
oil 2 shallots, minced (or 1 large yellow
onion) 2 tsp grated lime peel
4 tsp dried oregano 4 large cloves garlic,
minced 2tsp ground cumin
3 tsp salt 1/2 tsp ground black pepper
1/2 tsp red pepper (Recipe courtesy of Jack Curry, a
talented barbecue pit chef.)
Home Made Venison Sausage
Cube
venison and smoker bacon ends in equal parts. (Smoked bacon ends may be found at just about any butcher shop). Grind, alternating venison and bacon ends. After grinding, spread out meat and add seasoning. You may season with garlic, sage, or any sausage seasoning you
desire. Most butch
shops sell packages of sausage seasonings. After seasoning, knead into meat. Then with stuffing attachment on grinder, stuff into
casing in desired lengths. You may also make sausage patties. Wrap in butcher paper and freeze until ready to smoke. When ready to smoker, place sausage in smoker at 200°F and smoker
2-3 hours until done.
Tejas Blue Ribbon Brisket
Liberally season an untrimmed brisket with
Tejas Meat Rub after first spraying it with butter flavored PAM.
You may use Worcestershire sauce or mustard in place of the PAM. Wrap in foil and leave
the brisket in the refrigerator overnight. Allow the
brisket to come to room temperature while filling water reservoir in
smoker and bring temperature up to 200°F to 225°F, (200°F gives better
results but takes longer to cook). At 200 degrees you cook for one
hour for each pound of brisket. Remove foil and place brisket
with the fat side down on
far end of smoker away from firebox . (The
extra fat gives more protection to the center flat part of the
brisket.) After four hours smoking, remove the brisket and wrap
tightly with foil. Finish off cooking with the brisket foiled. Cook until the you can twist the strands of meat on the
flat easily with a fork.
Fosco's Famous Asian Flank Steak (well,
maybe not so famous)
1/4 cup soy sauce 1/4 cup
Worcestershire sauce 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice 2
tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro 1 tablespoon minced
fresh ginger and 11/4 pound flank steak. Whisk
first 5 ingredients to blend. Place steak in a heavy duty Ziploc bag
and add the marinade. Let stand 1 hour at room temperature or
refrigerate overnight, turning occasionally. Prepare grill
(medium-high heat). Grill the steak about 5 minutes per side for rare.
Transfer steak to platter; let stand 10 minutes. Thinly slice steak
across grain. While steak is standing drain marinade into small
saucepan and bring to boil. Thicken with arrowroot if desired. Pass
marinade as sauce. (Recipe courtesy of Jay Couey, aka Fosco Gamgee
Whitfurrows)
BOB's Special Rub
Here's a pretty good and simple rub that
I like. Mix equal parts of whole: Jamaican allspice, black peppercorns, pink
peppercorns, white peppercorns, green peppercorns, and coriander. Grind the
mixture directly onto your choice of meat for the day (I particularly like
it on a shoulder or spare ribs) in generous amounts. Sprinkle lightly with
salt. Barbecue the meat. Several hours later, enjoy. (Recipe courtesy of
BOB, a friend of Hound)
Mike Holy's Chicken
Many years ago, my friend Mike Holy (an
Aggie) taught me how he cooked some marvelous chicken. Make a basting
sauce of 1 stick of melted butter, juice of two lemons and 3 TBS salt.
Light your grill up with wood and/or lump and cook the bird parts
indirectly. Baste chicken pieces with this mix every 15-20 minutes or
so, turning and rotating the pieces each time until the juices run clear.
Takes about 4 beers (1hr 30 minutes, give or take) and it took me several
tries to learn how, 'cause I kept forgetting. (Recipe courtesy of Jack
Curry)
Smokey Burgers
Season
ground meat with garlic salt, black pepper and Worcestershire sauce.
Form into patties and place in middle of smoker at 225°F
for approximately 1 hour. By smoking the burgers rather than grilling them your
burgers will retain more flavor and stay juicy.
Hound's Citrus Brined Chicken
Prepare the brine: 1 gallon
water 1 cup Kosher salt or 1/2 cup table
salt juice of 3 oranges
juice of three limes juice of three lemons
rinds from same 1 sliced white onion
1 head of garlic, crushed stems from a bunch
of cilantro, chopped serranos to
taste, minimum of 4 rough ground cumin
and coriander 2 Tbsp each 1/4 cup chili
powder or any ground chile you prefer
(1/4 cup onion powder is optional) (1/4cup garlic powder
is optional)
Place the bird(s) and plenty of brine solution in a ziploc bag(s) and
leave refrigerated overnight prior to cooking. A cooler works
fine also. I use a 5 gal beverage cooler for all but the biggest turkeys.
Frozen soda bottles, or ice can be used to keep the cold. {8
lbs of ice= 1 gallon of water} An hour before cooking take the
bird out and thoroughly wash it down with cold water for at least 30
seconds. You can place aromatics like garlic heads, apples, citrus
in the cavity of the bird for the cooking. I like also to place orange
slices between skin and meat. Smoke rear end of chicken
toward the fire for 45 minutes/lb @ 225°F until the thigh is about
170°F. You can rotate as necessary to avoid charring.
Cooking this way will result in inedible skin, but juicy chicken. If
you like the crispy skin then place the chicken near the firebox.
This works for either chickens or turkeys. If you eliminate the
brine (salt and water) the rest of the recipe makes an excellent marinade
for grilled chicken. (Recipe courtesy of Cuchulain Libby, a.k.a.
Hound.) (Editor's note: this method sounds crazy and the brine
looks terrible, but IT WORKS! You won't believe it is chicken.
Flakes apart like fish. You must try this and it works on turkey .)
Grilled
Chicken
Halve
the chickens and sprinkle with freshly squeezed lemon juice.
Season with garlic salt, black pepper, and paprika.
Raise the fire grate in the firebox to the grilling position. We recommend using a mesquite charcoal. When coals are white, place chicken on the firebox
grill for 5-7 minutes per side.
Do not overcook...the chicken will dry out.
Fosco's Cedar Planked Salmon
1 TBSP vegetable oil 1 TBSP prepared
white horseradish 1TBSP soy sauce 1 or 2 garlic cloves minced
(or 12 if ya really like garlic) 1/2 tsp kosher salt 1/4 tsp
freshly ground pepper 1 to 2 lb thick salmon filet 1
untreated cedar plank big enough to fit the salmon on but small enough to
fit on the grill. Soak the plank for at least 30 minutes prior
to putting salmon on the grill. Prepare grill at high heat. Mix oil,
horseradish, soy sauce, garlic, salt and pepper in a bowl and brush on
skinless side of salmon. Place plank on grill rack over fire for
a few minutes to get it smoking. It is the smoke from the
burning plank that gives the salmon that oh so smoky goodness. Once
plank is smoking nicely place the salmon skin side down on the plank and
cook covered for 20-25 minutes. Keep an eye on it. If the plank flares
up just spray it with some water. Cook until salmon flakes easily with
a fork. Serve the salmon with grilled asparagus and watch your girl swoon! This
is one of my favorites. (Recipe courtesy of Jay Couey, aka Fosco
Gamgee Whitfurrows)
Apple Turkey
Inject turkey with apple juice concentrate
(large can of frozen). Season cavity with your favorite seasoning (I use
Rudy's Turkey Rub) and then stuff cavity with quartered apples. Rub
turkey with same seasoning. Smoke over apple wood (or use apple smoking
chips on pecan) at 225 °F for about 40-45 minutes a pound. Best to place
turkey in an aluminum roasting pan as the apples really put out the juice.
You can use this to baste periodically. (Recipe courtesy of R. Hauser.)
Jack's Hot Smoked Salmon
There are two methods for smoking salmon -
cold smoked (in smoke under 90°F for days, or hot smoking, which is really
cooking with smoke). Hot smoking produces a cooked, flaky fish that's got
plenty of smoke flavor. It's easy and quick to hot smoke and while there
are many methods, including brining, here's a way to produce a fine
product fast.
Run your smoker up to no more than 220°F
using a mild wood for smoke (avoid mesquite and hickory). I prefer alder or
bay, pear, apple, pecan or maple. Dried grape vines are also excellent.
Smoke whole salmon fillets with the skin on, flesh side up. Bring the fish
to room temp for at least an hour before smoking, to allow a pellicle to
form (the fish will look glazed and sticky on its surface). Season it with
salt and pepper (be generous).
Place the fillets in the smoker indirect for
about 1:30 to 1:45. It's done when it flakes easily with a fork and it's
just as good cold as it is hot out of the smoker. (Recipe courtesy of Jack
Curry).
Smokin
Joe’s Italian Style Smoked Pork and Roasted Potatoes
3-4 pound
boneless pork roast, 3 (lg) or 4 (sm) baking potatoes, 2 onions, 1 Green
or Yellow sweet pepper, 1 Jar of Roasted Red Peppers, Olive Oil,
Oregano, Rosemary, BBQ Rub of: Paprika, Salt, Pepper, Onion Powder,
Garlic Powder, Oregano and Rosemary.
RUB:
First prepare the BBQ rub with
the ingredient shown above. Paprika, Pepper, Onion and Garlic powders
are roughly equal measures, ie, tablespoon or so. Add salt at about half
measure, and the Oregano flakes and dried Rosemary leaves last and stir
well.
ROAST: Coat the
Pork Roast with a light coat of quality olive oil, rubbing in by hand.
Generously cover the pork roast with the rub, until it has a nice thick
layer of seasoning on it. Place the roast in the smoker, and smoke cook
until about 170 degrees. Remove and let roast "rest" covered with foil
for 30 minutes before slicing. Serve with potatoes and Red Pepper Sauce,
recipe below.
RED PEPPER
SAUCE: Open jar of roasted red peppers, put into food processor and
puree until liquid, but pasty. Pour into small cast iron skillet, and
add Olive oil, and generous helping of Oregano flakes. Cover skillet
with foil, place in smoker for one hour. Stir occasionally, and after an
hour, remove the foil, to allow a little smoke in. Cook another 30
minutes or so, if desired. Remove the pepper sauce when hot and well
mixed and cooked.
ROASTED POTATOES: Scrub and wash the
potatoes in running water with a brush. Cut into bite sized pieces, then
add to cast iron skillet. Peel and cut onions or slice them, add to
skillet. Wash, trim, and cut the green or yellow pepper, into short
strips, and add to the skillet. Coat the vegetables with some virgin
olive oil, add minced garlic. (How much garlic? A lot. There is no such
thing as TOO much garlic) Hit them with some salt and pepper, use
spatula to mix them all about in the skillet getting everybody coated
with oil. Cover the skillet with foil, and then add the skillet of
potatoes to the TOP shelf of your Tejas Smoker. (What’s that you say?
You don’t HAVE a TOP SHELF? Time to buy a larger Tejas Smoker!!! ) Roast
the potatoes for a few hours, turning/stirring them whenever you tend
the pit. Taste them occasionally for tenderness. When they are getting
somewhat close to done, remove the foil covering, and let them assume
some smoke. These potatoes taste great with some of the red pepper sauce
on them! Have some nice red wine with the above meal, and have a
cappuccino after dinner!
We’d
like to hear how you like these recipes and your smoker pit.
Have any favorite ones of your own that you would like to share?
Write us at Tejas Smokers, Inc.,
P.O. Box 4158, Houston, Texas 77210-4158.
Or email us at jim@tejassmokers.com.
THANKS!
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