I don't really have any pearls of wisdom in that area. I was more of a steak, hamburger, pork chop griller until I bought this thing. I did the apple cider vinegar marinade on the brisket that I cooked and it was fine. I also used a rub before cooking. I don't know much about this so I'm not sure if the vinegar is for tenderizing or flavor or both but I'm one of those who likes to drown everything in sauce anyway so if it's for flavor, I'm not sure I needed it. I've been using a pre-made rub and have been tweaking it a little here and there. I can't really say that my additions have made much of a difference but it's all been good.
I'm still amazed by how idiot proof this thing is. I see some variables with cooking times based on size and that's been my biggest concern. I've cooked baby back ribs, beef ribs, brisket, chicken and pork spareribs and they were all really good. The babybacks got the 1:10 and I gave the larger ones 1:45. All done but not overdone. Pork tenderloins and chicken were also good. The 7 minute per pound of poultry rule seems to be about right.
I called Christian about the brisket before I tried that. It was 9 lbs. and he recommended 2.5 hours. I thought that seemed pretty short but he was right on the money with it.
My ultra cheap-charcoal experiment this weekend basically told me that anything will work. My MegaLow Mart brand worked but seemed to take a little while to get going.compared to the Matchlight. I gave it about a half hour head start before adding the meat but it worked fine.
I used about half to two thirds of an 18 lb. bag for ribs and a 4 lb. pork
tenderloin. Plenty of heat. Next time I'll try a name brand for comparison and decide from there but in any event, Matchlight isn't necessary.
Again, this is a great place for exchanging ideas about this product. Why it's on a Satellite website, who knows and who cares. Good information is good information no matter where you get it.