BBQ Scotch Eggs Are Incredible! | Chuds BBQ


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41 replies
  1. @JbirdlLester
    @JbirdlLester says:

    Looks Good chuds. but you have a few of us confused. why would you go with a German flavor profile when there scotch Eggs lol. wouldn't you want to stick to the main Theme ? Scotch Eggs.

    Reply
  2. @screaminyj
    @screaminyj says:

    As someone who is on team solid yolk, I wonder if it would be better to partially cook them, like in this video and smoke them for a while at low temp or go with a standard boiled egg and smoke them "hot and fast"? Maybe I'll have to experiment this weekend.

    Reply
  3. @keithkamps77
    @keithkamps77 says:

    Brad just a heads up, I am subscribed, watched the entire video but hit the thumbs up early so I didn't forget to do so and YouTube said I only watched 1/8th of it. What's going on here, it's with every channel I watch, if I hit the thumbs up early and watch the entire video it comes back on my history as barely watching it!!!!!!!! Something shady is going on here.

    Reply
  4. @JontyBlue67
    @JontyBlue67 says:

    Runny yolks is a sign of a fantastic Scotch egg!
    Similar to the large ravioli with a whole yolk sitting in a bed of ricotta. When you cut into it, if the yolk doesn't run, it is a fail.

    Reply
  5. @L3001USPSA
    @L3001USPSA says:

    Good timing. The wife just made some scotch eggs last weekend. The toughest part seemed to be getting the eggs cooked and peeled. So good! We didn't grill them though.

    Reply
  6. @caronin
    @caronin says:

    What you've got to remember about Scotch Eggs is the sausage is a fairly solid thermal barrier so you'd have burned sausage long before you over cooked the egg in the frying/grilling process. I see so many people worry about over cooking the egg but I've honestly never had that happen after my first time making them when I over did the sausage layer. I do a 6.30 egg and deep fry and get a jammy yolk every single time. P.S. Evan is correct, cooking a few styles of egg is the first test I ever gave when doing a practical interview for a new cook.

    Reply
  7. @LD.Walker
    @LD.Walker says:

    I don’t know what’s going on with HEB and their natural pork butts. The fat cap on ALL 12-14 of them in the case were destroyed. I don’t mean a little scalped spot, I mean almost half the fat cap was missing.

    Reply
  8. @professornuke7562
    @professornuke7562 says:

    Melbourne Oz here. What is it with Americans and runny Scotch eggs? I grew up eating the damn things every other week. My Mum's favourite. Serve with tomato sauce or chutney (UK, brown sauce) it's supposed to be rock hard boiled, and no crumbing.

    Reply
  9. @phillroo7871
    @phillroo7871 says:

    Enjoy the idea of smoked scotch Egg,
    BUT, just to ensure your history is correct, traditionally the Scotch egg is actually hard boiled. Albeit I always like the soft to jammy. Thanks for the ideas.

    Reply
  10. @Lettuce-and-Tomatoes
    @Lettuce-and-Tomatoes says:

    I’ve got some questions about your deep fryer. Thanks I’m advance if you answer any of them!

    What’s it called (name / model)?

    How much oil does it hold?

    How long does the oil last on average? I know that this depends on what you’re cooking: fish vs. chicken vs. fries, etc, but I’d appreciate a guesstimate.

    That’s a lot of oil, so I assume that you have some ideas to stretch the 30 bucks or more worth of vegetable oil as far as possible. I’m sure that you filter your oil and you probably mix a little old oil in with the new when you do a complete changeout. Any tips, tricks or guidance in this are would be greatly appreciated.

    Reply

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