BBQ Talk #11 - The Difference Between Cooking with Naturally Aged and Kiln-Dried Wood

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 82

  • @bladesofarmour
    @bladesofarmour 3 года назад +3

    Joe, you continue to impress the bbq community with knowledge and inspiration! I know I speak for many when I say "We Love you" and your bbq wisdom, thanks so very much!
    I cannot tell you how many times that I bought wood chunks from the big box stores and the chunks were so dry and with no moisture at all. This is a big help!

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  3 года назад

      Glad I can help! Those things have their purpose. So does kiln dried wood. There are also some places that turn out amazing food using only kiln dried wood, but it’s just not my preference. Thanks for the support.

  • @Rednef088
    @Rednef088 3 года назад +2

    Joe coming through with that nuanced bbq info. I'm always looking to learn the details between the lines. The why's more than the what's. Thanks for the bbq talk videos Joe. Appreciate it all the way from Australia!

  • @JDM_MSK
    @JDM_MSK 2 года назад +2

    This was very helpful. I was trying to decide between kiln dried and seasoned wood from my local supplier.
    TY

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  2 года назад

      Glad this helped! Definitely check my other videos for more tips.

  • @RandyAllenYo
    @RandyAllenYo 3 года назад

    I have quite a mixed bag of seasoned wood (time wise) on my rack right now - that trick of the different sounds when you drop the logs is game changing...thanks Joe!

  • @apollocr3164
    @apollocr3164 3 года назад +3

    Another great video amigo!

  • @Schilks
    @Schilks 3 года назад +1

    This video solved so many problems I was having, you’re the man 👊🏼

  • @mannvsfood
    @mannvsfood 3 года назад +1

    Another good one Joe. I bought and tried some of that kiln dried stuff for my Oklahoma Joes offset and not only did it burn too fast and like you said, doesnt really make a good coal bed... The ones I got seemed extremely dense. Not a fan.

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  3 года назад

      for sure man. you live and you learn. im not you can't cook with kiln dry. i know there are some places that put out some great food with it. it's just not my preference.

  • @evilnoriega
    @evilnoriega 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for the informative videos. I'm looking to start my own bbq business and I'm trying to get educated on cooking with large offset smoker(500+). Most guys on here are doing tutorials with backyard cookers. So your experience is greatly appreciated. Hopefully you can do a video on managing your meat(placement and rotating) inside your Primitive smoker. Thanks again!

  • @frankrodriguez8990
    @frankrodriguez8990 2 года назад

    Tried it your strategy today. Had great results. Your flipping awesome, i don't care what the say about you. The strike zone went to the smoker. The other dryer one went to my santa maria grill. Noticed the fire management on the offset went smoother. Lesser Spikes in temperature.

  • @charlieellenburg3465
    @charlieellenburg3465 2 года назад

    Thank you brother, i wish I would have known this 2 years ago when I started offsetting

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  2 года назад

      We all live and learn. Glad I was able to help!

  • @derekpierson7412
    @derekpierson7412 3 года назад

    I got mine stacked up in the garage. Thank u craigslist!

  • @do7229
    @do7229 3 года назад

    This is great information. I have a question on whether you notice a difference in using wood from the trunk of a tree compared to using branches (from smaller 3"-4" to larger 6" or larger branches). I've noticed that smaller branches tend to be more dense and don't burn as well even after being seasoned so I usually just reserve those for campfires. Thanks for your videos.

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  3 года назад +1

      I don’t really using small branches. I’m not sure why, but they seem wax almost and don’t burn so well because it doesn’t have as much surface area.

  • @theftworthrealtor
    @theftworthrealtor Год назад

    Great vid and comparison, it did sound just like a strike at the bowling alley…😂…I’ve got some post oak that my dad has had sitting for 10yrs, it’s so dry and ignites with zero effort, so I use a few of these on the bottom when getting the fire started in the pit…I learned the hard way that the dry wood burns too hot and fast as well as not giving much of any smoke flavor…

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  Год назад +1

      Just gotta learn from experience

  • @charlieellenburg3465
    @charlieellenburg3465 2 года назад

    I about gave up on offset smoking using kiln dried wood in the beginning. Couldn't regulate Temps at all. Using natural aged wood 15-20% moisture is the 🔑 to my success

  • @etamonte0304
    @etamonte0304 2 года назад

    Can I use seasoned wood from the company hot wood ?

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  2 года назад

      I haven’t heard of that company before so I can’t say.

  • @bryantpartazana6356
    @bryantpartazana6356 3 года назад

    Here in Florida is rains every day or at least 3 times or more a week. You can’t keep a wood pile and let it dry out naturally because it won’t ever dry due to the all the humidity in the air and the rain that soaks it every other day

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  3 года назад

      That’s a bummer. Hopefully you can find a space inside to at least keep it out of the rain.

    • @dgmickley
      @dgmickley 3 года назад

      Look up solar kiln. You can downsize it to your liking.

    • @dgmickley
      @dgmickley 3 года назад

      Solar kilns don’t get as hot as major kilns. Plus the wood rests every night at reg temp

  • @Kooly1
    @Kooly1 2 года назад

    I’m in South Florida. We don’t have local places or people that sell seasoned firewood, only kiln dried from a big box store or restaurant store. Any suggestions on a reasonably priced way to get seasoned wood to my area?

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  2 года назад

      Hard to say…. I would ask around and see what other ppl offer.

  • @eyefearnobeerbeer717
    @eyefearnobeerbeer717 3 года назад

    Great video. Thanks man!

  • @bigstevessmokemchokembbq8746
    @bigstevessmokemchokembbq8746 3 года назад

    Thx for the info...question. I recently purchased some oak that seems to have a somewhat high moisture content. When I add it to the box it's sizzle and smoke,but not really burn hot. Can that be a problem over a long cook?

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  3 года назад +1

      You’ll just need to pay attention to it more and possibly feel the fire soon than expected.

  • @laithrahahlaeh8123
    @laithrahahlaeh8123 3 года назад

    Hi brother thanks for the video you do every time like to ask you I live in apartment and I need to do catering Business in ironwood TReager can you tell me what I need to do to have good castmer and tel me secraet so don’t lose Always I need to be in the toeb the smoker can feet 5 brisket how many pound you think I need to pay each brisket thanks for your help

  • @paulwolfenbarger378
    @paulwolfenbarger378 3 года назад

    This explains a bit. Living in the desert kiln dried wood dries out quickly. I will need to sort out methods to age wood to a controlled moisture content.

    • @knoxavebbq
      @knoxavebbq  3 года назад

      See if you can get green wood and just keep it, especially if you’re not cooking very often.

  • @chrishabgood8900
    @chrishabgood8900 2 года назад

    I find cherry wood is awesome on pork.

  • @brisketwizard8004
    @brisketwizard8004 3 года назад +1

    first!!

  • @BestBBQShow
    @BestBBQShow 3 года назад

    Gimme that good white oak!

  • @mustangguy6242
    @mustangguy6242 11 месяцев назад

    It is not the “same thing”. The whole point of this was to compare seasoned and kiln dried. Waste of time! And it took over 9 minutes for you to get to the part that I realized I was wasting time.

  • @ChrisMinchella
    @ChrisMinchella 3 года назад +2

    Hey so not to go full woke on anyone but like, just thinking about the longevity of BBQ as an industry and cultural touchstone - this style of cooking requires a ton of wood from trees that take 20 years to reach maturity. Is the industry doing anything to reforest so we don't run out of BBQ wood in the future?

    • @BestBBQShow
      @BestBBQShow 3 года назад +3

      BBQ is slow cooking so the fire isn't very big. The wood isn't being used that fast and any wood guy in Texas can tell you they'll never run out.
      If you're worried about trees I'd look at paper production, deforestation for farming and even guitar production.

    • @ChrisMinchella
      @ChrisMinchella 3 года назад +1

      @@BestBBQShow I'm concerned about those too but this was more along the lines of "because of climate change the river in Lynchburg is drying up, threatening the future of Jack Daniels" type of thing.

    • @BestBBQShow
      @BestBBQShow 3 года назад

      @@ChrisMinchella BBQ isn't a large contribution to climate change. You can listen to my podcast (#124 Dr. Sarah Place) all about sustainability and beef production.
      The fires we cook on are similar to a fireplace at home. Unless you're in LA it's legal to use your fire place.

    • @jeans3490
      @jeans3490 3 года назад +3

      Dude. Stop. Smh 🤦🏻‍♂️ Trees are meant to be harvested. Like a crop. Or you can do like they do in California and do NO forest management, NO removal of trees - and have deadly wildfires year after year. (Don’t California my Texas!)

    • @ChrisMinchella
      @ChrisMinchella 3 года назад

      @@jeans3490 I don't understand what forest management has to do with a question about sustainable supply?
      I'm subscribed to a channel about BBQ. I'm fine with burning wood for cooking and do a fair amount of it myself. I just wanted to know if this was something people were taking into consideration and the answer appears to range from "yes" to "yes but with needless amounts of snark".
      You fall in the latter category.