July 5, 2007

Happy Fourth

Filed under: BBQ, Equipment, Home cookin' — Professor Salt @ 7:05 am

Nothing says Independence Day like slow smoked barbecue, American style. Hope everyone had a good Fourth. Beside the requisite burgers and dogs, I cooked brisket and pork ribs on the Komodo Kamado to celebrate our glorious release from British tyranny.

Brisket

This is the best brisket that I’ve ever made, thanks to the steady temperatures held by the Komodo. I haven’t cooked all that many briskets in the past because my Weber Smokey Mountain doesn’t accomodate their large size, but with the Komodo, cooker capacity isn’t an excuse to avoid cooking this most difficult of traditional barbecue cuts.

Pork ribs

The second session on the Komodo fared far better than my first. Dennis, the owner of the Komodo company, gave me some tips, and the cooker stayed pegged at 200 degrees F for many long hours.

I’m taking the next few days off. Going to race cars up in Northern California. Keeps tabs on my race team at the 24 Hours of Lemons!

June 26, 2007

Black Dragon Episode 2

Filed under: BBQ, Equipment, Home cookin' — Professor Salt @ 11:22 pm

Live fire is a fickle mistress. Her gentle embers caress us into barbecue bliss. Or she can burn the bejeesus out of beef brisket.

I started my first cook session in the Komodo Kamado and set off to my job. The fire burned unattended with a twelve pound slab of meat. Results fell somewhere between bliss and bejeesus. The cooker temperature had climbed up from 230 degrees to 300 while I toiled for lucre, and the brisket had speed-cooked to slightly overdone by the time I came home. Not the optimal slow and low cook, but it turned out still edible.

A little more time spent twiddling the vent controls, and I’ll learn to better manage the fire in this new piece of equipment. Should’ve known better than to leave her burning without me.

June 20, 2007

The Black Dragon Episode 1

Filed under: BBQ, Equipment, Home cookin' — Professor Salt @ 11:30 am

Komodo Kamado

(Full disclosure: the manufacturer provided this unit for review)

Meet the Komodo Kamado, my new outdoor oven. I’d call it a barbecue pit, but it does more than long, slow smoke cooking. I’d call it a grill, but it’s not limited to high temperature, direct heat grilling. Because it’s built from refractory materials similar to what kilns and furnaces are made of, it’s also an oven that easily withstands cooking temperatures of 1000 degrees F. Why would you need or want that?

If you’re a pizza freak like me, you can use the Komodo to bake the sort of charred-bottom, Naples style pizzas possible only in wood or coal burning ovens. Fans of American pizza restaurants like A16 (San Francisco), Mozza (Los Angeles), Grimaldi’s, Patsy’s, and Totonno’s (New York), Frank Pepe’s , or Sally’s Apizza (New Haven) know the sort of crust I’m talking about. It’s impossible to attempt pizza like this at home, unless you have an oven that can hit 800 degrees. Now I do!

I’m breaking in the kamado this week, and learning how to control its firebox. I learned to use the Minion method of starting a low temperature charcoal fire in the Weber, and that’s what I’m employing with the Komodo. Let’s look at some differences between the Weber and the Komodo.Side by side

  Komodo Kamado OTB 23 Supreme Plus
Weber Smokey Mountain
Cooking chamber material Cast refractory material Roll formed, porcelain coated steel
Weight 476 pounds 44 pounds
Grill material 304 stainless steel, 1/4″ or 3/8″ rod diameter Steel 3/16″ rod diameter
Grill surface capacity 23″ main + 18″ top + 18″ bottom 18.5″ top + 18.5″ bottom
MSRP US$ 2510. US$ 250.

The Komodo dwarfs a Weber Smokey Mountain, the smoker I’ve been using for several years with excellent results. The Komodo is made of two different layers of a ceramic-like refractory material. Its dense inner wall absorbs and reflects heat back into the cooking chamber. The thinner outer wall insulates that heat within the vessel. All that mass should keep cooking temperatures very stable no matter the weather or wind conditions.
Air intake

The draft door controls air intake to the firebox. The precision CNC-machined stainless door slides in and out smoothly, like a well-spittled trombone. Once the fire gets near the target temperature, the door is closed, and the daisywheel vent provides finer heat adjustment. The wood knob is beautifully turned from weather resistant teak. As a former machinist, I appreciate the Kamado’s extraordinary build quality.

Ash cleanout

The floor of the cooker is level with the draft door, which eases ash cleanup. Notice the cleanly machined metalwork.

Lower end

The round “eye” next to the draft door is a port for temperature control devices like the BBQ Guru or the Stoker.

Chimeny lid
Heat and smoke exhaust past this “hat.” The heavy stainless steel rod threads into its mate, which is cast permanently into the lid. A ceramic gasket material shuts out air effectively when it’s time to put out the fire.

Lid interior
Interior view of the lid. The ovoid shape of the lid is designed to reflect heat evenly across the entire grill surface. The Supreme Plus package comes with a top grill made of the 3/8″ stainless steel rod, and the main grill below it is made of the standard 1/4″ stainless rod. There is room for a third grill below.

The Komodo’s grill is much roomier than the WSM’s. Where I barely had space to fit a puny 9 pound slab of beef brisket on the Weber, I have plenty of room for a 15 pound monster brisket on the Komodo.

The lid weighs a whopping 108 pounds, but is spring loaded for effortless opening. Let’s look at how that works.

Spring in closed position

This is the heavy duty spring that lifts the lid. Notice the preload tension in the lid-closed position. Hinges are cast permanently into the Komodo, unlike hinges from other kamado manufacturers that require constant re-tightening.

Spring in open positition

Easily adjustable tension in the spring hoists the lid when the latch is opened.
Spring cover

A sleek fairing increases top speed on this bluff beast. Mine is made of black fiberglass, but current productions of the Supreme Plus model use a stainless steel cover.

Lifting handle

The lifting handle is made from stout 3/4″ stainless rod. It takes a serious bending jig to form that material into a graceful arc. When the lid is closed, the triangular piece in the center latches it shut automatically.

Weld detail

Closeup view of the lifting handle’s weld. When a nice looking bead isn’t ground smooth, it’s called a “show weld.” It’s not easy to lay down a tiny bead on thick material like that.

Its massive size, over the top features, and top notch build quality makes the Komodo the Bugatti Veyron of ceramic cookers. While I’ll never be able to afford the Bugatti, ever, even I, with modest means, could save up to splurge on this seriously fancy smoker / grill / oven.

In the next episode of the Black Dragon: “Gentlemen, start your engines…”

June 16, 2007

Happy Father’s Day

Filed under: BBQ, Equipment, Home cookin' — Professor Salt @ 8:19 am

I was given a new toy. Can you guess what it is? I’ll give you a few hints

New toy

It’s big. Really big.
658

With the crate, it weighs 658 pounds.

Peeking

It’s scaly. Is it a fire breathing dragon?

Crowbar inside

It comes with its own crowbar: therefore, not from IKEA.

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