Posts about cooking specific dishes or with specific methods (e.g., sous vide precision cooker, grill, smoker)

Cameroonian soya meat

Making Cameroonian Soya

When I was in Cameroon during college for an anthropology field school, one of our favorite things was going to the market and getting soya (or suya if you’re in Nigeria) from the street vendors. Originally making its way through sub-Saharan Africa thanks to the Hausa people, soya is commonly sold in the streets of markets, in villages, and even along roadways where tour buses or bush taxis stop to allow passengers to buy items.

I first had soya on our initial evening in Douala, the country’s principal seaport, where we spent two days. We met up with a professor from the University of Youndé and while sitting outside in a marketplace talking with him, purchased soya from one of the vendors nearby. It was served with a sauce that he repeatedly told us to avoid because it was “very hot.” The sauce, appropriately called “pepper sauce” by Cameroonians is a very common condiment and primarily made with habanero, garlic, onion, basil and other spices. And it is hot. Eventually, I inadvertently swiped some of the soya meat through the sauce and within a few seconds my eyes were watering and my nose running. It’s really good though.

As we made our way to Youndé, the capital of Cameroon, the following day, our bus stopped on the side of a road in a market area and vendors were sticking kabobs of soya meat in through the windows hoping to entice passengers to buy them, which we did. We stayed a few days in Youndé to care for any issues that may require government services, and then made our way to Bamenda where we would spend the next several weeks conducting our research projects.

After an afternoon of interviews and data gathering, a fellow student and I would commonly spend an hour or two at a market having a beer and eating soya. We could get a whole plate of soya for about the equivalent of 25 cents. It was a good chance to decompress, talk about the day’s work, and enjoy tasty food.

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Ribs, potatoes, broccoli

Smoking Ribs on Gut Feel

I decided to cook ribs without monitoring their temperature. Usually I follow the 3-2-1 method (three hours unwrapped, two hours wrapped in foil, one hour unwrapped) but cook them until they reach 190. But, I was cooking these on a workday, so I needed to be able to focus less on the cook, and decided to just throw ’em on and try not to be overly involved with the effort.

They may actually have been the best ribs I’ve made yet.

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Point in pan, ready for broth and sauce

Smoked Brisket On a Schedule

Smoked brisket and burnt ends are a special treat these days in the Carr household. This past weekend was the second time I’ve made brisket on the smoker, and it’s a significant time commitment, but the payoff is worth it. I wrote a few weeks ago about how my butcher has hiked their price for brisket from $3.99 to $5.99, which is a significant jump in cost for smoked brisket. Thanks to a neighbor, I was able to get an 18-pound packer (both point and flat cuts) for $3.69 per pound at Costco. Despite my wife raising the alarm when I brought it home, I didn’t quite consider how damn big this chunk of meat was, and as it turned out, had trouble fitting it on my 18.5″ Weber Smokey Mountain cooker. There are worse problems one could have, I suppose, when making smoked brisket.

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Both meats about finished

Smoked Pork Butt

Food: Smoked pork butt
Temperature: 270°
Cooking time: 9:30
Wood used: Cherry
Notes: Cooked using minion method to start charcoal, then basted several times, wrapped after 8 hours

We all love pulled pork, and I wanted to try a sandwich I miss from when we lived in Florida. So, I threw a pork butt on the smoker and let it cook all day while I was stuck on conference calls. There was a barbecue place in Jacksonville called Bono’s BBQ, which offers a sandwich they call a Bo-Hawg. It’s a pulled pork sandwich with a link of smoked sausage and a slice of cheddar cheese. And it’s very amazing.

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Finished burnt ends

Smoked Brisket Burnt Ends

After trying my hand at smoking a pork butt a few weeks ago, I decided to try a smoked brisket on my new Weber Smokey Mountain cooker. This was a little daunting to me because of the duration of the cook, but it actually wasn’t anymore involved than the pork butt was. And the payoff was incredible.

For this cook, I followed Malcolm Reed‘s recommendation for cooking brisket burnt ends. If you haven’t seen Malcom’s site, HowToBBQRight.com, you’re missing out on a great resource. His videos were very influential in making me want to buy a smoker and start making some of the stuff from his site.

Food: Brisket and Burnt Ends
Temperature: 250°
Cooking time: 9-12 hours
Wood used: Pecan, Cherry
Note: Cooked low and slow until internal temperature reaches 205°

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Basting the pork butt with sauce

Smoked Pork Butt

Food: Smoked pork butt
Temperature: 225-250°
Cooking time: 12:00
Wood used: Apple
Notes: Cooked using minion method to start charcoal, then basted several times

I really want to cook a brisket in the coming weeks, and I felt that a pork shoulder or pork butt would be a good stepping stone for a long cook like the brisket. There’s less risk, obviously, in a $16 butt than a $60 brisket, so if I’m going to mess things up, it’s preferable to do it with a shoulder or butt. Previously, I’ve only done shorter smokes, using a chicken or ribs. Also, it’s worth noting — since many people don’t realize this — that the pork shoulder and butt are not the same thing, nor is the butt from the rear of the pig.

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Smoked ribs cut and ready to be served

Smoked Ribs

Food: Smoked baby back (pork) ribs
Temperature: 275°
Cooking time: 5:30
Wood used: Apple
Notes: Cooked using minion method to start charcoal, then the popular 3-2-1 cooking method for ribs, spraying regularly with apple juice.

OK, it’s time to smoke some ribs. I’ve tried out the smoker on a couple of chickens and learned how to use it a little, so it’s time to make something I love… pork ribs!

I decided to try a popular way of cooking ribs called the 3-2-1 Method. Basically, you cook the ribs uncovered for three hours, then sauce and wrap them for two more hours, then cook them uncovered with another layer of sauce for one more hour. I deviated from this slightly in that the last hour was too long — the ribs were already at ready temperature — so I only cooked them about 35 minutes.

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Chicken cooking on the smoker

Smoked Chicken

Food: Smoked Chicken
Temperature: 275°
Cooking time: 3:00
Wood used: Apple
Note: Used Minion Method to start charcoal, which worked great. Kept consistent temperatures throughout the entire cook and held right around 270-280 degrees.

This was actually my second time using my new smoker, having just wrecked a similar chicken a day earlier. I’m not entirely sure where things went wrong on the first go-around, but the breast read a little under minimum safe temperature and the leg was a little over. When I carved it, the breast was fine, but everything else was undercooked.

Since I wanted to try ribs this weekend, I decided to get another chicken and give it another shot. This one turned out pretty great.

I put a rub on the chicken and held the smoker at 275° for three hours, spraying it with cooking spray every 30 minutes or so to help the skin turn crispy. Overall, I think it went well and I’m getting used to tuning the temperatures with the vents on the Weber Smokey Mountain cooker. It’s still going to take some practice though to get better at it.

Steak and paprika sweet potatoes

Sous Vide Steak and Paprika Sweet Potatoes

In my quest to experiment with two new meals per month this year, I’m continuing the sous vide experience into August.  I decided this month to make a dinner with steak and paprika sweet potatoes.

My friend, Andy, told me a while back that cooking steak was one of the primary reasons he bought a sous vide immersion cooker.  I wanted one primarily for ribs, but I’ve found a number of great uses for it since then, including brisket, flank steak, butter-infused potatoes, and several cocktails. Read more

Flank steak searing on the grill

Flank Steak with Chimichurri Sauce

I got a sous vide immersion cooker for Christmas and I’ve been using it pretty regularly since.  I spent at least a year mocking people for posting about it (I used to regularly see the Will It Sous Vide? series on lifehacker.com and it annoyed me) but then a family friend brought theirs and we made ribs.  And they were amazing.  And I was sold.

This week, I made flank steak with chimichurri sauce.  This was one of the lower effort meals I’ve experimented with and will certainly be one that we end up revisiting with some regularity.

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