Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
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Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
Lowes has two 20 pound bags for $9.99
Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsford_(charcoal" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;)
Kingsford Charcoal is made from charred softwoods, pine, spruce etc. then mixed with ground coal and other ingredients to make a charcoal briquette. As of August 2000, Kingsford Charcoal contains the following ingredients[1]:
Wood char
Mineral char
Mineral carbon
Limestone
Starch
Borax
Sodium nitrate
Sawdust
Kingsford Charcoal is made from charred softwoods, pine, spruce etc. then mixed with ground coal and other ingredients to make a charcoal briquette. As of August 2000, Kingsford Charcoal contains the following ingredients[1]:
Wood char
Mineral char
Mineral carbon
Limestone
Starch
Borax
Sodium nitrate
Sawdust
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Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
mmmm coal flavored burgers. Tasty.Bullwhip wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsford_(charcoal)
Kingsford Charcoal is made from charred softwoods, pine, spruce etc. then mixed with ground coal and other ingredients to make a charcoal briquette. As of August 2000, Kingsford Charcoal contains the following ingredients[1]:
Wood char
Mineral char
Mineral carbon
Limestone
Starch
Borax
Sodium nitrate
Sawdust

"If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace."- Thomas Paine
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"And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music." - Friedrich Nietzsche
Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
Bullwhip wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsford_(charcoal)
Kingsford Charcoal is made from charred softwoods, pine, spruce etc. then mixed with ground coal and other ingredients to make a charcoal briquette. As of August 2000, Kingsford Charcoal contains the following ingredients[1]:
Wood char
Mineral char
Mineral carbon
Limestone
Starch
Borax
Sodium nitrate
Sawdust


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Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
You beat me to it. . . that's all I use, too.Carry-a-Kimber wrote:I typically use dried pecan or mesquite wood but when I do charcoals I get mines at Kroger, it's Royal Oak 100% Natural Wood Charcoal.MedicMan218 wrote:I'm no train conductor....where do you get that stuff?
Native Texian
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Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
wood chips in a fire box on the gas grill will give you the same flavor with out all the mess
Last edited by barstoolguru on Mon Jun 04, 2012 3:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
I use propane for quick-and-dirty grilling.barstoolguru wrote:wood chips is a fire box on the gas grill will give you the same flavor with out all the mess
I use the charcoal grill for quality grilled meats.
I use the charcoal starter chimney for steaks (if you haven't tried this, I HIGHLY recommend it. I prefer charred and seasoned steaks cooked rare or medium-rare on the inside. This method makes homemade steaks at high-end steakhouse quality. . . as good as III Forks, Bob's, Ruth's Chris, Reatta, Morton's, Willie G's, etc. We've used it on more than just Porterhouse. . .it works on Ribeye, Sirloin, Stips, etc.)
[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=Y5tytP4Do-A[/youtube]
I use the smoker with Pecan, Hickory, or Mesquite supplemented with Royal Oak charcoal for barbecued meats.
Native Texian
Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
That's an old recipe, but it probably hasn't gotten any better. I am changing to lump.puma guy wrote:Bullwhip wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsford_(charcoal)
Kingsford Charcoal is made from charred softwoods, pine, spruce etc. then mixed with ground coal and other ingredients to make a charcoal briquette. As of August 2000, Kingsford Charcoal contains the following ingredients[1]:
Wood char
Mineral char
Mineral carbon
Limestone
Starch
Borax
Sodium nitrate
Sawdust
The perfect thing to grill those "pink slime" burgers!

NRA Endowment Member
Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
wood is the only way to go...you can use a chimney starter and throw it on top of a propane torch to get the wood going. No charcoal, no fluid, all flavor.
But for weeknight grilling, it's propane...
I've got one of those dual grills...one side for wood, one side propane. Uber convenient.
But for weeknight grilling, it's propane...
I've got one of those dual grills...one side for wood, one side propane. Uber convenient.
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Re: Kingsford Charcoal at Home Depot
I use the cheapo $80 propane grills from Walmart that I view as essentially disposable for the weeknight stuff. I used to have a nice propane grill, but decided when it died to invest in better smokers and leave the propane stuff simple.pbwalker wrote:wood is the only way to go...you can use a chimney starter and throw it on top of a propane torch to get the wood going. No charcoal, no fluid, all flavor.
But for weeknight grilling, it's propane...
I've got one of those dual grills...one side for wood, one side propane. Uber convenient.
The funny thing is that I typically set my charcoal starter for the smoker on the grate of the propane grill and the smaller natural wood lumps fall through into the propane grill area. . . so now I get a light wood flavoring every time I use propane.

Native Texian