My Photo

Photo Collections

Riverfront Park

  • Underpass and Trees to the Walnut Landing Docks
    Photographs of the trains, arifacts and other features of Riverfront Park in Sewickley Pennsylvania!!!

Riverfront Train Transfer

  • HK Porter Locomotive, Tender and Bobber Caboose
    Photos of the transfer of the H.K. Porter Locomotive and Bobber Caboose to Riverfront Park, Sewickley, Pennsylvania. The Porter Locomotive was built in 1897 in Pittburgh Pa. Photos of the transfer of the locomotive and caboose from Station Square in Pittsburgh to Riverfront Park are courtesy of Peggy Standish. Click on the images below for full-size photos.

EGroups

Interesting Sites

« Ebony Complete | Main | "Primo" Grill/Smoker Cart Complete! »

Experiments with Kamado Cooking

As has often happened with the desk project, a short "intermission" project in the workshop has intervened in progress.

My wonderful family got me a great combination birthday/father's day gift...  A ceramic grill/smoker from Primo Grills and Smokers.    I have long enjoyed grilling, and as my wife says "The ceramic cooker should allow for many hours of your obsessive experimentation"....she knows me well.

From their website  "Ceramic Cooking has been practiced in Asian countries for over 3,000 years. It remains a popular cooking method. Ceramic allows food to cook evenly with minimal moisture loss."    The image below is credited from the Primo website explaining how these cookers work.

OvalsketchheatlossThis is also known as a "Kamado" cooker and I have been wanting to try one out for awhile.    The better known "Big Green Egg" brand ceramic cooker is of the same type as the Primo.  My wife chose the Primo for its larger size, and I think that she made a very good choice (she knows that bigger is usually better in my book!).  Both the Primo and "the Egg" get excellent reviews on-line and I do not think that she could have made a bad choice.

I have found the website "The Naked Whiz" , that provides a great deal of information on the Ceramic Cookers.   The Naked Whiz also provides an interesting review of lump hardwood charcoals.  These seem to be hard to find in Pittsburgh, and will require some research.

Unfortunately,  due to demand this time of year and limited distribution, my Primo has still not arrived (they are made in small batches in the US).    But that's OK, because it will give me time to build a work-stand/cart for the grill prior to its arrival.   Its always great when your hobbies can collide in this manner!

The grills come designed to be free-standing, but it seems that almost all owners either build or buy a stand to raise the grill to a convenient  height, and to allow for work surfaces  (again, see "the Whiz").  The pre-made stand that Primo sells is made from Cypress, and I briefly considered building one out of Cypress also.....but  I decided to go with less-expensive and easier to find treated-lumber structural components with Trex-brand manufactured decking material as the work surfaces.

I know.....normally I would go with all wood also, but in this case I am being practical...strange but true.

I bought the material yesterday, and will begin construction shortly and post photos.  Once I start work on this, I expect to be able to finish the cart in one long afternoon.  An easy project.

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz

Tools and Shop

  • Highland Woodworking Link

Great Books

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 08/2005