Overall, as a night out at the movies, a very impressive adventure -- but as director Peter Jackson tells us quite bluntly via First Mate Hayes (Evan Parke), "it's not an adventure story."
What kind of story it IS remains open to interpretation. Most people agree that, beyond the surface tale, King Kong is not about a giant gorilla, but to me, the 2005 remake it is about Carl Denham's desperate quest to both save and destroy himself.
But more on that in a bit.
I'd cranked the grill up to max each time before, and had barely reached first crack. Thanks to my thermocouple, now know that I was getting up to damn near 800 degrees F - almost twice as hot as I needed to be. How I had a successful second roast is beyond me. Maybe due to the lower bean load.
I am convinced now that the primary problem with my design is lack of air circulation within the drum - there aren't enough air holes, and it will be impossible for me to drill enough. Well, not impossible, but extremely time consuming and difficult due to the flimsy structure.
But all is not lost.
So Friday night I drilled a few more airholes in the drum, lined the bed of the grill with some ceramic tile chunks I had left over from redoing my kitchen this summer and fired it up. I let it burn on high for about 30 minutes (drum not installed) as a test, paying attention to the odors from the tiles, just in case they'd been treated with anything.
It started on the first push of the igniter, no muss, no fuss.
The rotisserie is the Charbroil Premium unit, which bolted right up with no drilling. I lost my eBay auction for perforated stainless steel, so the drum is cobbled together from a Walmart mini step-to-open trash can and an 8-inch aluminum cake pan. The hatch is on the end, like a RK drum, but the hinge is spring-loaded to keep it shut while in use.
read more for pics and details.