My church is doing a 200# one next month. We made a pit with block, small fire at one end. Maintain 250ー . last yr we cooked 160# for about 12 hrs i think. Meat was well done falling of the bones.
Put a metal cover over it, and has a nice cooking rack with handles.
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One place at the Wisconsin state fair does that with pigs and chickens although they use rotisserie. They use the true "lump" charcoal (not the briquettes). Starting to see more and more of that lately. Back to rotisserie...bought the Weber kit for my oversized 6 burner LP hog...I love it! Something about that slow rotation that puts the meat to heat, then back off, only to repeat. Have done chickens, rump roast and pork...all come out great.Many open bit barbecues are built just that way. Most shovel coals into the pit and burn the wood into coals in a separate burn box or barrel.
But you are doing it for the church! Seems to me that BBQ requires a long cooking time and a lot of "fluids" for the cooks.View attachment 468579
The metal cooker. Nothing like camping in the woods and eating pulled pork fresh off the cooker. And we built an oven for baking.
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One place at the Wisconsin state fair does that with pigs and chickens although they use rotisserie. They use the true "lump" charcoal (not the briquettes). Starting to see more and more of that lately. Back to rotisserie...bought the Weber kit for my oversized 6 burner LP hog...I love it! Something about that slow rotation that puts the meat to heat, then back off, only to repeat. Have done chickens, rump roast and pork...all come out great.