Has anyone tried the High Temp Spray by Pam? Dose it work or shall dose it help in clean up of the racks. If no do Yal"ll have any advice about what dose. I am pretty sure That I will never see the BS like it is now, after the first smoke session? Cant wait to try this machine out< Mike
Ps, fellows please excuse my typos, after 4 surgerys on my eyes I make a lot of them, I try to de-bug the post but I still miss some
There are a few guys using the high temp Pam but I have never used it yet. I usually use regular pPam or just veg oil spray for the racks. They clean fine. I just soak them for 1/2 hour to 1 hour and they scrub of fairly easy. I don't us anything on the V-pan and it usually comes clean after a soak as well.
Mike
Thanks agian Mike, I apologise for all the questions and I am sure you guys are tired of answereind them, maybe in the future I will be able to contribute something, Mike M.
That's what the forum is all about Mike. Everybody wins when people share infomation. There's not a day goes by that I don't pick up something new from this forum. That's what makes it so great. Knowledge is a wonderful thing, but it's alot better when it's shared. You'll be an old pro in no time. I've only been smokin' for about a year now so I'm still a newbie too! ;D
Mike
Mr Walleye is right Mike. Keep the questions coming. Teachers are learners as well. Don't worry about the typos. I can't spell anymore anyway and this site doesn't come with spell checking. :-[
I have used high temperature Pam, and regular nonstick spray. I could not tell any significant difference. Since you are smoking/cooking at lower temperatures, regular nonstick spray will work fine. The high temperature spray is for surfaces that get around 500°F, and stay close to that temperature while grilling.
There may be some benefit, by spraying it on the "V" shelf, I haven't tried that.
Hi Mike. I like peel ease myself. Comes in 16oz or 1 gallon sizes. Consider also that you get much more than this because it dilutes with water before putting it in the spray bottle. I use it on the grill and smoker and my wife uses it in the kitchen for any application where pam would be useful. Here is a link if you are interested.
http://www.sausagemaker.com/index.asp?PageAction=PRODSEARCH&txtSearch=peel+ease
Quote from: hillbillysmoker on July 23, 2007, 05:37:18 PM
Hi Mike. I like peel ease myself. Comes in 16oz or 1 gallon sizes. Consider also that you get much more than this because it dilutes with water before putting it in the spray bottle. I use it on the grill and smoker and my wife uses it in the kitchen for any application where pam would be useful. Here is a link if you are interested.
http://www.sausagemaker.com/index.asp?PageAction=PRODSEARCH&txtSearch=peel+ease
This stuff sounds interesting, I spent about an hour yesterday cleaning the bs and it still looks good but I bet this stuff would cut that hour down some, thanks for the tip, Mike M
Hey Mike,
Don't wash off the character. I mean seasoning. ;)
Sent for some Peel Ease to try it. Wasn't too happy with the shipping charges, but boy does this stuff work great! Sprayed everything, trays, v-tray, probes, chille grill, armpits, everything. When it was time for cleanup I tossed everything in a plastic tub full of a hot, strong solution of Palmolive Power Scrub and a dishwasher tab for good measure. Two days later, took the lid off the tub and as I pulled each piece out they just rinsed off perfectly clean. NO SCRUBBING!! This is after a full load and a 14 hour smoke/cook! I've conquered the only drawback to smoking I've
ever had, CLEANUP. ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
Good stuff that PEEL EASE ;D
nepas
Im using the Pam high temp. I forgot to spray the racks down on my last smoke and could definately tell during clean up.
I usually use just a canola spray...nothing sticks...no imparted flavor...and clean up is the dishwasher for the bowl, the V pan and the racks. I only wash the racks I use...the others (if there are any) just get seasoned.
I use a product called PBW (Powdered Brewery Wash), it literally soaks everything off with absolutely no elbow grease involved. You can find it at any homebrew shop. Great stuff!
Quote from: Payson on January 16, 2008, 07:57:58 AM
I use a product called PBW (Powdered Brewery Wash), it literally soaks everything off with absolutely no elbow grease involved. You can find it at any homebrew shop. Great stuff!
Never tried that Payson. I'll have to give it a shot. Thanks for the info.
Dawn Power Dissolver. Spray and let it set for 10 minutes or so. Tough stuff get a second spray. Works well and no extended soaking or stuff sitting around. Don't use on brushed steel of any kind or the paint on ss grills or appliances or non-stick coated racks. Yea, good stuff for the racks, V pan, pan and bowl. ;)
WCK...I think Giz and VA use that too...worked like a charm...
Could be, Giz asked about it... blue bottle with a white top... Walmart is the only place I have seen it and they dont always have it. I suppose that varies by area.
I have used Dawn Power Dissolver for some time but recently went to PBW. With it I simply mix it with hot water drop everything in and take it out the next day and rinse it. No work, no elbow grease, no hassle. Works for me.
This is were I buy if it is of interest to anyone:
http://pivo.northernbrewer.com/nbstore/action/search-do?searchTerm=pbw
Does that stand for Pabst Blue Wibbon? :)
That be Lone Star down hear LQ....LoL! And it would prob work!!
C