Food, Tips and Tricks

What To Know Before Smoking Your First Meats

We did it! We got a smoker and found a new hobby. We got lucky however, as we had been researching and shopping for a smoker when my neighbor asked if we wanted theirs. They moved across country and could not fit it in the U-Haul so were willing to gift it. It is still very new and our neighbor did all of the sealing on it so it is ready to go. We are using the Oklahoma Joe Highland charcoal smoker/grill.

The night we smoked our first meats we started with a 3.6 pound chuck roast and 3 pound pork butt roast. I had read a few guides that said to cook around 225, but we were closer to 240 it seems as we worked to control temp for the first time. We did some things wrong and many things right, so I put all we learned after our first time smoking into this post for you.

This is not a ‘How to Smoke’ post, but in addition to those How To posts you will want to read this is a list of no-to’s when smoking your first meats!

The Wood Chips

When our neighbors gifted us their smoker they could not take in their move they gave us their charcoal, wood chips and pellets they had left. We eyeballed about 1/2 bag of wood chips and guessed that looks like plenty. I was at the store about 4 hours in! I never thought to look into exactly how many chips to smoke with. I literally had a vision of throwing chips on (I am a smoking newbie, remember) and that it will add some flavor and smoke away for hours. Wrong! I had needed a bit more. You will need about 4-5 cups of chips for 5 hours of smoking. The bag we had was about 3-4 cups left. Looks like a lot, but we smoked for 7 hours total and we needed a few more cups.

smoked meat prep

The Rub

I had tried some smoked meat from our neighbor a while back and remember them saying they used a coffee rub and it was delicious. I looked through coffee rub recipes until I found one in which I already have the ingredients. As I made it I thought “this is too much rub”. I only used half the rub to coat, then I was looking at some temp recommendations and came across a headline in one of those temping articles that caught my eye. It said to ‘smother’ in rub.

Maybe I didn’t have too much rub. I thought about it a moment, pulled the rubbed meat out of the refrigerator and decided to add all the rub and smother my meat. I am glad I did. I can’t imagine our meat if I had used half as much. Go a head and rub away!

smoked pork butt

Time

So, I did read a lot that you’d think this can be controlled. I knew I wanted a quicker smoke for our first time so we found smaller 3 pound meats. In some articles it said check after 3 hours if running heat 225-250 degrees. However, in some it said 2 hours per pound. Some articles said done at 145 and some said done at 190. So, what is the logical thing to do? Figure down the middle? Wrong! We figured we could be done smoking in 4-5 hours. It took 7 and we ran heat closer to 240 or so.

As I was frantically looking at when to stop and “it should be done by now” it is only then I read something crucial I had missed. 145 degrees is the safe to eat temp, but you want the Chef recommended temp of 190 degrees for the best tenderness and taste. I felt OK taking ours off at 164 degrees and wish I had kept the beef on longer. The inside was tender, but not the entire roast.

smoked beef

Do Your DUE Research

I’ll admit it, I was one who thought “How hard can it be? I’ll be fine after the 2 or 3 videos I watched that basically said the same thing…” Do your research and really allow this to become a piece of education knowing you will always have something to learn as you go. It was halfway through smoking I ran out of enough wood chips and had to go get more. I decided part way through I did need water and had to ruing a nice baking dish witch was all I had as a water dish because I did not buy one first. I now LOVE this book and I highly recommend it asa reading tool before you smoke (or even if you already have)- Franklin Barbecue: A Meat-Smoking Manifesto

Keep a Smoking Journal

A journal? This isn’t English class?! We smoked 2 meats our first time-a small pork roast and a small chuck. I rubbed both, but used different timings and as I discussed my meat smoking experience I began to already get mixed up what I did with which meat. If you plan to really try different smoking methods, make your notes. You may have marinated a meat and used pecan chips and then realize next time you would like to use a rub only and cook even slower. You will have a hard time keeping track of what you’ve already done, the notes of that days results and tips you found along the way if you do not keep your results and thoughts on paper. It will really help you remember what worked and what’s for next time. A simple recipe or cooking journal works great.

Home, Reviews, Tips and Tricks

Tips for Small Guest Room Spaces that Entertain

Tips for Small Gust Room Spaces that Entertain

When we bought our home we finally had enough rooms to not have to share spaces. No more sharing a guest room with my office or game room in a bedroom which was always a constant mess. When we settled in and I started decorating for our new home, I really took pride in our guest room. It was a small room, but I worked with the space and made it a small guest room space that entertains.

guest tv

I took a small dresser and I made sure they are 100% empty to use as guests wish. The TV is small and not overwhelming, but enough. Because we don’t keep cable in the guest room, I have our Jetstream HD TV Box With Voice Control Search Remote by Ematic.

Let me stop a moment and talk about having an HD TV Box. It is 2019 and that means most people are used to their favorite streaming shows and sites. Whether there is a sports game or TV series they are into, an HD TV Box will bring all of that to your guest room. Our Jetsream AGT418 is available at Walmart and gives your guests access to over 450,000 movies and TV episodes on over 4,500 paid or free channels, including Netflix, Hulu, and PBS Kids. Showcase all the favorite entertainment including movies, TV shows, games, sports, music and much more all from your Android, iOS, Mac, Windows, Chromebook or TV! Chances are they brought their tablet or laptop so this is a great piece to have in the room!

Google TV

Back to more tips for small guest room spaces! When it comes to electronics I keep the remotes on or right at their given devices. When I have a guest over the remotes are not all stacked on a table. The TV remote is at the TV, HD TV Box remote with the box, etc. This makes guessing what controls what so much easier. I also keep the TV input set back to the right Smart TV input so when the guests turn on the TV it is ready to stream correctly.

electronics for guests

Other touches are easy to handle if you think like a hotel. Have towels, soaps (I get mine from leftovers at hotels), a clear closet that is 100% empty, trash can and an outlet strip if needed for use. I also have a new bottle of water on each nightstand and a fan.

guest room essentials

On my walls I made sure there was a mirror somewhere, so I bought a large framed mirror to hang. I also began collecting brochures when at lobbies and hotels to use on my walls. This is a fun decor idea. In the photo below, notice I also included a sheet with our Wi-Fi info to have easily available for guests. I arranged on clipboards by adventures: Seattle (our local town), mountains, sea, local and more. Do what makes sense for your area or find brochure templates guests can sit and go through as they get to know the area.

guest room wall

I think that about covers it. From the photo below I have all my guests need in one small space. I can also mention that my guests get a Queen Sleep Number bed because my husband and I upgraded to a King so we passed the queen down. Now our guests can position the head fully up to sit and work or watch TV.

Did I miss any tips? Share yours below!

Guest room decor ideas
Non-seasonal, Parenting, Summer, Tips and Tricks, Travel

Helpful Packing Tips When Traveling with Small Children

I hope you get the chance to travel together this summer, locally or abroad. These tips are great for flights or day trips and even a night at Grandma’s when traveling with small children. Safe travels!

Buy the RIGHT luggage

The fun monkey head suitcase is adorable, but I hate to tell you that many children luggage brands are not practical. Don’t get me wrong, there is a brand or two out there that does children’s travel cases well, but I ditched the cute stuff years ago with our 10 year old because I needed to fit more and stay organized with it all.

What do I use? We happen to use the Expanse Wheeled Duffel Carry ON by Eagle Creek. I use an Eagle Creek wheelie myself as well as the Eagle Creek Pack-It Specter On Board toiletry bag. Shout out to Eagle Creek in this post, they seriously do a great job with their bags and I recommend them for you and the kids!

Use Ziploc Bags for Clothing

I’ll never forget the look I got from my Mom when I dropped my son off for a stay with her years ago and as we opened the suitcase she saw my gallon Ziploc bag packing job. But, let me say that when I picked him up, they were all neatly re-stacked and refilled, dirty inside.

As I pack, I lay the bottoms, shirt, socks, underwear (in that layered order), fold all together in one set and put in a gallon ziploc and seal with air released. Put it in his duffel and repeat for all outfits. It is not only a folding space saver where I can stack many outfits neatly, but it is a time saver every morning. I (or whomever he is visiting and now himself) can grab a bag and head to get changed. It is all there. He shoves his dirty clothes back in, presses and seals. Smelly clothes are sealed and stay away from clean clothes and repacking to leave is so easy! Try it!

1 Bag + 1 Blanket + 1 Present

This is what comes on planes with us to the seat. I have one small backpack (bright colored so you can spot them if they get ahead of you) that he can wear and help me carry less with his snacks, entertainment, headphones and a small (noiseless) toy when younger. Now it is a tablet, his phone, book and chargers plus snacks. He carries his blanket and I always have a gift when he was younger to make the ride start off pleasant. The last one I bought him was a Pokemon neck pillow. He never took it off all flight or the next flight…..

Your Luggage Front Pocket

Chances are one of your luggage bags has that extra front pocket you never really know what to use it for. Grab 1 ‘special’ treat per child and a new thin book. Once you are done with the hassle off the plane, to a car or taxi, into a hotel lobby and finally checked in to your room you (and they) are beat! You have an urge to get organized, freshen up and plan the rest of the day and you have some exhausted kids.

Just wait for the magic as you unzip that pocket, pull out that special pick-me-up snack and quiet book(s). It will buy you some uninterrupted time. If you got in early enough a child or two may just doze off. Let them rest a moment or 2 and use that time! Then you’ll all be more relaxed, rested and ready to start your trip.

My Travel Items


Disclaimer: Thank you Eagle Creek for partnering with us on this feature. All opinions are 100% my own

Pets Products, Tips and Tricks

Bringing Home a New Puppy – Tips by Dana Humphrey “The Pet Lady”

Bringing Home a New Puppy

Bringing home a new puppy should be a bit of a chore. If you have put the thought and preparation into bringing him or her to your home then that is half the battle. A new puppy is an adjustment and sadly many puppies get re-homed because the first family just was not prepared enough.

Here are some great tips by Dana Humphrey “The Pet Lady”. Make sure you can share these with anyone you know who is preparing to bring home a puppy.

1. Get a good pet carrier. I always say “bark buckle up”. It’s important to transport your new puppy home in a safe carrier. Plus, they can cuddle up in there as it is important with a lot of new stimuli to try to limit  their world. Limit the amount of space that the pet has access to at first. Limit the number of people and animals the pet meets at first too.

2. ID Tag: It’s important to get an up to date ID tag, as whether it’s a rescue pup or a new puppy, pets have been known to escape most within the first 3 days of being in a new environment. You want to make sure you have an identification on them if you haven’t had time to microchip them yet.

3. Harness and Lead. You are going to need to get out and take them for a walk, pretty much right away. Buddy Belts makes an awesome leather harness and lead set that is gentle on their chests, doesn’t pull on their trachea like a collar and has some cute stylish options. It is easy to put on and makes walk time a great experience all around.

4. Wee Wee Pads. If you live in the city, wee wee pads are a must. Train your pet to piddle on the pads so that your home can stay as clean as possible. Urban dogs and small dogs can easily be trained to use these for relieving themselves. You want to put them in the same place for consistency and not to confuse your pup.

5. Toy. All puppies want to play! Avoid having them rip up your sofa or shoe collection and give them their own toys to play with. A toy box or a toy area where they know those are for them can help save your personal items. It’s great to stimulate and engage your new pet with some chase, fetch or tug of war.

Our furry friends are precious and special so we must provide them with the health, safety and love they deserve!

Dana Humphrey, AKA “The Pet Lady” travels coast to coast scouting out the best pet products, brands and pet experts. She is also a professor and program facilitator at FIT, the fashion institute of technology and teaches in the pet product marketing and design department. She was recently awarded by Pet Age Magazine 40 under 40 and Women of Influence. The Pet Lady website:Www.thepetlady.org