Natural Lump Charcoal
For cooking purposes, charcoal comes in two different shapes: lump
charcoal and briquettes. Lump charcoal is charcoal which has not been
formed into briquettes. Briquettes are the pillow shaped little pieces of
compressed ground charcoal.
Always use lump charcoal in the Primo®. Primo® Grills and Smokers
use a fire bowl to hold the charcoal. As the charcoal burns, the ash falls
down into the bottom of the bowl. There isn't much room for a lot of ash.
Lump charcoal produces low amounts of ash and will burn at whatever
rate and temperature that you allow it to. It also tends to burn hotter
and light faster than briquettes.
The Process
Natural Lump Charcoal comes from partially burning wood or heating
wood without the use of oxygen. In doing so, this charred wood
becomes carbon. During the process of making charcoal, volatile
compounds in the wood (water, hydrogen, methane and tars) pass off
as vapors into the air, and the carbon is converted into charcoal.
The Properties
Since Charcoal is pure wood carbon, it weights much less than its
original state. It is also free of tars (which can contain carcinogenic
compounds, like benzo-a-pyrene). Unlike charcoal briquettes, which
contain different chemicals, natural charcoal is 100% carbon.
Types of Lump Charcoal
There are 2 types of charcoal: the first type comes from natural wood
which has been cut and made into charcoal. This is as natural as you
can get. The wood comes from trees, branches and scrap pieces from
saw mills. The second type comes from using processed scrap wood
and tuning it into charcoal. Processed scrap wood tends to burn faster
since its density is less than natural. This is because there is less
moisture in the wood at the time it is transformed into charcoal.
Lighting Lump Charcoal
Never use starter fluid!
It will give an undesirable flavor to your food
and absorb into the ceramic. There are many other ways to light lump
charcoal. You can use paraffin fireplace starter blocks (Primo®
recommended), electric starters, propane sticks, weed burners,
propane torches, MAP gas torches and Chimney starters.
First Use
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