Oh, I'm not giving up on the gas burner...as stated, if I didn't do a three hour test run with that tank, it would have made it through the cook. (Or chosen a 5 pound butt instead of a 7 pounder) It kept a pretty constant tempature...with no fiddling (225-235F)...so pleased with that.
I can also see switching from charcoal to gas...durring a cook. If I get things positioned, I can switch from charcoal to gas in under 30 seconds. Which means I can get a good wood smoke on whatever I'm cooking with charcoal and wood, then swap out the fuel for the end of the cook. That idea seems the most beneficial
My time estimate on the butt was fairly close at 12 hours. (12:48) Given that it was below freezing out to start with and I was still able to do my outdoor chores that day and not have to constantly monitor the pit, I'm very pleased with the results. I will however get a different pan made for the wood. I didn't taste any ickyness from the smoke however (yes, I did have a piece of bark only to taste, cooks privilege)
Well, for the first shot at a butt, it was pretty good. Anything new is just a learning situation, and in theory you get better the more you learn.
And yeah, given the large amount of meat, I let everyone pick their own sauce. I went with the traditional North Carolina type (as I wanted to try it) wife went for Baby Ray's Original BBQ, straight out of the bottle. Granddaughter went for the Baby Ray' s also. I can definitely see adding cheese in some away...
And once you have a smoked brat, you'll never go back to grilling them.....