Adding fuel to a grill during long cooking

Adding fuel to a grill during long cooking - Small hexagonal coals with holes smoldering on metal rack before roasting barbecue in nature

I was thinking about cooking a whole chicken on the grill. This could take a couple of hours, and I might need to add some fuel to keep the heat going. Assuming I am using briquettes, I'm guessing the best bet is to light up a chimney starter and then add the hot grey coals into the grill? Is it safe, or advisable, to just add fresh briquettes during cooking?



Best Answer

First, it shouldn't take "hours"; make certain not to over cook your chicken.

You should spatchcock your chicken so that it cooks more evenly.

Using a chimney to prepare briquettes is a good idea, just be certain you have a safe place to keep and store burning briquettes, if you don't use them all.

I'd add a few briquettes at a time to keep the heat high; be pro-active.




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Can you add more charcoal while cooking?

You can. If you add them directly over the burning coals it might lower your temp. If you're just extending the snake then it's not a problem. If you do need to add and only have the option of putting them on top of the burning coals, I would light them first.

How do you keep a charcoal grill hot for a long time?

Most charcoal grills have vents on the bottom. Open the vents wide and you get more air and thus a hotter fire. Partially close the vents and you get less air and a cooler fire. Make sure the vents are open when you light your charcoal and set up the grill.

Can you put gasoline in a grill?

Never use gasoline, kerosene, or other highly volatile fluids as a starter. They can explode. As an alternative to lighter fluid, use an electric, solid, metal chimney or other starter specifically made for lighting charcoal briquettes or wood chunks.

Can you add more charcoal while smoking?

The first way is to add more unlit coals, which you can do when you see temperatures begin to dip. Just add unlit coals; the lit ones will start them gradually. The second strategy is to add lit coals, which is important when the temperature drops below 225\xb0F and you need to increase it quickly.



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More answers regarding adding fuel to a grill during long cooking

Answer 2

If your barbecue has a lid and you can control the airflow then you do not need to add fuel when you are cooking a chicken as if you close the valves you will reduce the oxygen going to your coals and they will burn slower. Get the charcoal lit in your chimney starter and then pour it onto one half of the barbecue, leaving an area where you can cook the chicken on indirect heat. Start the chicken off on the hot side and get the skin some color, then move it to the cool side, put the lid on and close the valves some to you get about 400F inside. Depending on your charcoal you should get at least 2 hours of cooking time this way, probably longer.

A good tip is to put a drip pan under the chicken, it will keep the juices from making the bottom of your barbecue messy, and it will smoke off giving your chicken some flavor.

If you do want to add fresh charcoal there are 2 ways:

  • Light it in a chimney starter and pour it in: advantage to this is it's lit and hot and gets you cooking at a high temperature right away, downside is pouring coals in stirs up everything and you can get ashes on your food
  • Add unlit coal: I like this approach because it stirs up things less, as long as you think ahead and add them ahead of time you are good

As for how to add coals it depends on the design, some barbecues have a door or flaps to add coals, with others you have to lift the grill grate off entirely. A good pair of barbecue gloves is essential, I prefer synthetic materials where you can wash them without the material getting wet - wet gloves are dangerous!

Answer 3

Simple answer, get a good digital instant-read meat thermometer. Get a fresh 16oz can of your favorite hops brew and wash it and the whole chicken. Make your indirect fire however you want, and adjust the vents to hold a temp of around 250 at rack level. Put the chicken on the beer can and prop it up in the cooker. Close it all up, go get another beer, and google "meater" and "flameboss" and ask yourself just how deep you wanna get into BBQ. Keep an eye on the temp, and when it starts to drop off, add some briquettes right to the pile. Try not to stir up too much ash. After about an hour or so, temp check twice in thighs and twice in breasts. Legs - 180, Breast - 170 is when they're done. Enjoy!

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