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You will want a drip pan to catch the fat from a pork butt. I don’t know what your experience is with outdoor cooking, but my suggestion for a new Bullseye owner is to treat it like a Weber charcoal or gasser grill. Cook some burgers, brats, hot dogs, bacon in a cast iron skillet, etc. first to get a feel for it. Then move up to the low and slow cooks once you get a feel for it. You will make mistakes and learn as you go-I burned brats on my Bullseye last night and I’ve owned one for over two years now!What did you use to control dripping/grease build up?
Hey, BTW, on the subject of Brats......You will want a drip pan to catch the fat from a pork butt. I don’t know what your experience is with outdoor cooking, but my suggestion for a new Bullseye owner is to treat it like a Weber charcoal or gasser grill. Cook some burgers, brats, hot dogs, bacon in a cast iron skillet, etc. first to get a feel for it. Then move up to the low and slow cooks once you get a feel for it. You will make mistakes and learn as you go-I burned brats on my Bullseye last night and I’ve owned one for over two years now!
I kinda like the SNAP.Hey, BTW, on the subject of Brats......
You guys may already know this and I'm embarrassed to admit that throughout my entire life, I didn't.
I've always had problems with Brats with tough casings. I don't know much about casings, so I thought that the tough ones were the plastic ones. Had the BIL/SIL here about three weeks ago. He's an ex-butcher and a longtime griller/smoker. I was complaining to him about the casings being tough, even after 2 + hours on the Bull.
He looks at me kind of funny and says "just boil them to a low boil before you put them on the grill, dummy".
Durrrrr. Works like a champ.
Sorry for the de-rail.
Oh, I'm OK with a "little" snap. What I'm not OK with is having to cut the damned thing with a sharp/serrated knife, chew it and then spit the casing out because it's so tough.I kinda like the SNAP.
Sometimes when the casing is soft, the meat comes out and the casing stays behind and oh my is that an ugly thing to see dangling from the bun.
I took a sausage making class a while ago - Owner/Instructor told me to do 20 minutes in the oven at 350, then take them to the grill just to add color and grill marks. I did that until I got my recteq "oven" with large griddle. Now they smoke/bake/fry at the same time along with tons of onions drizzled with oil. It's actually about 2 hours this way - carmelized onions, and a smoke ring in the sausage. Still juicy, and a nice snap in the casing.