Tyrone1Wils wrote:If it were me with the water situation, I'd just leave it without water ive done pork shoulder at 275-300 and its been fine. If you're going to wrap it then you may as well let it run hotter aswell
Yeah I was thinking that. At least I have an idea of how much water it uses per hour now. I'm leaving it through the stall and we'll see how it goes
BRUN wrote:Just fill the water pan loads if your using water, but I've just done a shoulder 4 hours at 350f no water in the pan and it was incredible, 2.5kg joint
Yeah I just read your other post. This is my first proper go at low and slow pork shoulder after the first time messed up so I'm trying to do it the proper way so I can get to know my Excel. It's a beast!
RobinC" wrote:When I'm using water I fill the pan up to basically an inch below the top
Is that with boiling water or hot water from the tap?
At the moment the butt is still stalling at 156F and I'm concerned about the charcoal. I used a full layer of BigK restaurant grade lumpwood and then put a full chimney starter of lit SupaGrill briquettes on top of the lumpwood. I checked it about 20 minutes ago and the briquettes have almost burnt away and the lumpwood is about half of what it was originally. I'm thinking I should have put down two layers of the lumpwood or at least layer briquettes on top of the lumpwood and then put the full lit chimney briquettes over that. Is that the normal way of doing it for long cooks? I thought a single layer of restaurant grade lumpwood would have been alright but I'm not sure it's got another 5hrs in it.

