Perhaps we should ask
@Alastair70
Yeah I think he might know something about it...
Well I did have the both Weber and the Kamado on the last night!
The advantage of gas is that its quick and easy to get cooking and temperature adjustments are simple. You can smoke on them, low ‘n’ slow is effortless, and the BBQ flavour comes from rendered fat burning on whatever your heat source is, gas or coal.
Charcoal is an ingredient, and if you fancy playing around with single verital wood varieties then theres a world of extra flavours to explore. I’ve got Big K Marabou and Stagg Hornbeam on the go at the minute. You get more charcoal flavour in on low ‘n’ slow cooks than fast and furious.
The learning curve for temp control is pretty short, I light the chimney a good hour before cook time and do a two zone cook with direct and indirect happening at the same time.
Its horses for courses. I like cracking a beer a good hour before cook time and stinking of smoke for the rest of the night, so it’s charcoal for me. I do have a small gas portable, but I don’t like it and bought a Smokey Joe for the beach instead. One of my mates who BBQs more often than I do has a gas Weber Genesis and swears by it.
Queue an excuse for gratuitous food ****. Here‘s last nights Char Sui pork belly, sous vide in the Grainfather then finished on the Kamado.