T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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694.1 | smoker cooking | DARTS::LRP | | Mon Aug 31 1987 17:02 | 8 |
| We have a smoker and cook everything from chicken to ham.
It is very basic to use fill up the pan with water and smoke
your meat for at least 3 hours. You can cook meat as long as
you want within reason as long as there is water in the pan.
If the meat looks pink that is because of the smoking.
|
694.5 | Not big bucks | DARTS::LRP | | Thu Sep 10 1987 14:44 | 4 |
| There is really not alot of bucks to cough up, charcoal smokers
go for about $50 and gas smokers go for about $150 at Leachmeres
I think they even had one for about $30.
|
694.6 | Worth the time | MET730::BURNS | | Tue Sep 15 1987 15:43 | 6 |
| As mentioned, smoking is easy and fun. There are various methods
which you can use (dry smoking, wet smoking ((with wine, beer, etc)).
Turkey and chicken come out great. I've also done fish (salmon,
shark) and even I can't mess it up. Make sure you soak the wood
for a while before placing into the grill. This helps increase the
life of the wood. Enjoy
|
694.7 | HELP!!! | JAWS::WIERSUM | The Back Deck Wizard | Thu Dec 10 1987 09:37 | 23 |
|
I need some help!!!!
I have a large WEBER and want to smoke up some TURKEY (DEC type),DUCKS
and salmon. I am leaving fo California on the 22nd and would like
to bring some smoked stuff for the family.
My friend is telling me that I should barrow his electric smoker
as I will probably blow it using the weber. I don't buy that, I
aint that stupid.
What about the outside temp. How does the cold porch factor into
smoking and were the hell do you find charcoal and smoking briquettes
this time of year?
Please help
Thanks
Garry
|
694.8 | Why make it difficult? Accept his help... | SUPER::KENAH | Virgins with Rifles... | Thu Dec 10 1987 14:26 | 11 |
| 1. Borrow your neighbor's smoker.
2. Borrow the directions for your neighbor's smoker.
3. Read and follow the directions.
Smokers aren't grills; each was designed for a different purpose.
Accept your neighbor's generosity, ask him for his help and advice,
and give him a reward of smoked something or other.
andrew
|
694.9 | | DARTS::WIERSUM | The Back Deck Wizard | Thu Dec 10 1987 15:19 | 12 |
|
Andrew, I will take your advise and his. If I am not mistaken,
the WEBER is tauted as a "SMOKER GRILL". Why can't I put the water in
the bottom/middle and coals around the edge? That way the heat from
the coals would not be directly under the meat. this seems to make
sense to me. Am I missing something?
I am going to barrow his smoker.
Garry
|
694.10 | Weber GRILLS with smoke, doesn't SMOKE | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Wed Dec 16 1987 14:53 | 23 |
| I've used my Weber for turkeys and ducks, but it is not a smoker in the usual
sense. It will fully cook the food at barbeque temperatures, and impart a
smoky flavor. A smoker cooks the food at a much lower temperature. As a
result, the outside temperature makes little difference to the Weber. I
cook turkeys in the usual time (oven time give or take a few) on my Weber on
New Years Eve, on the back deck, sometimes at temperatures below 0� F. What
makes the difference is how many times you take the cover off. I usually bank
the coals, put a foil Lasagna pan in the middle, and drop pieces of soaked (if
dry, soaked overnight, if green, soaked for the morning, always in HOT water)
hickory wood (or bark from the shag bark hickory) or applewood onto the coals
(not in the pan).
As far as charcoal is concerned, I make sure to get a few extra bags in the
summer, and collect the smoking wood whenever I see it.
If you want to do the traditional smoking, you can get the wood chips for the
smoker at Watson's Smokehouse on John Fitch Highway in Fitchburg. They also
sell smoked turkey/duck/salmon. And, they will smoke foods you provide, if
you can wait long enough for them to build up enough to fill their smoker.
- JP
|
694.11 | Times For smoking | ASABET::POMEROY | Footprints on the Dash upside down | Thu Apr 01 1993 17:45 | 10 |
| I got a smoker/grill for x-mas but have since lost the cooking time
manual. Does anyone out there have one that they could bring into work
and type me a note on times to smoke certian meats. I noticed that a
previous reply said that aleast three hours is needed for meat. Well
I bed to differ. I had a turkey that called for 8 hours. The sheet
I had broke down each meat with the minimum times.
Thanks in advance for the help,
Kevin
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694.12 | "at least 3 hours" includes 4, 5, 6, 7, and even 8! | RANGER::PESENTI | And the winner is.... | Fri Apr 02 1993 08:51 | 0 |
694.13 | | OCTAVE::65180::VIGNEAULT | Java-Man | Fri Apr 02 1993 08:58 | 23 |
|
The best thing to do is use a meat thermometer and cook it until
the proper temperature is registered. Perhaps 3 hours over a
_very_ hot fire might be okay for some meats. I have a charcoal
fired smoker, and I find that it's usually between 4-5 hrs for several
chicken breasts to ~8 hrs for a turkey. The amount of wind, the
outside temperature, and the temperature of your heat source all
affect the overall cooking time. After a few tries, you'll
acquire a feel for how long things need to cook. I never found the
manual to be especially accurate as far as cooking times are
concerned. In the case of the charcoal fired smoker, some things
don't ever seem to reach the proper internal temperature because it's
such a slow heat. In those cases, I finish the goods in a
conventional oven to be certain they reah the proper temperature.
Doing this has no effect on the flavor, and insures properly cooked
meat/poultry. You also don't want to be removing the cover from
the smoker very often since doing so releases the pent-up heat and
lowers the cooking temperature. It takes a while for it to build
up again.
Lv
|
694.14 | Thanks....!! | ASABET::POMEROY | Footprints on the Dash upside down | Mon Apr 05 1993 09:25 | 9 |
| Well I cooked the Ribs this weekend for about 5 hours.....I removed the
lid just twice to put on some BBQ sauce. They came out great. I
figured they were cooked well enough because the meat pretty much fell
off the bones. Just one more quick question, When white meats like
chicken and pork cook, do they all come out pink????
Thanks for the advice,
Kevin
|
694.15 | | OCTAVE::65180::VIGNEAULT | Java-Man | Mon Apr 05 1993 11:19 | 9 |
|
The pinkish color is a characteristic of smoked foods, so
to answer your question, yes. Again, a meat thermometer is
your best bet for determining when things are done. Ribs
are great in the smoker and you've succeeded in whetting
my appetite. Hickory & Mesquite I've found are the best
woods for ribs imo.
Lv
|
694.16 | | DNEAST::MAHANEY_MIKE | | Mon Apr 05 1993 13:20 | 6 |
| I have a good supply of Hickory chunks but the last two
times I used my smoker I used strictly apple branches right from the
tree so that they were green and smoked nicely. With people now
prunning their trees for the year it should be easy to obtain some.
Apple gives it a real nice flavor, I also used apple cider in the pan
instead of beer, wine, water, ....
|
694.17 | Try bark | RANGER::PESENTI | And the winner is.... | Wed Apr 07 1993 08:47 | 8 |
| For a HEAVY hickory flavor, peel a strip of bark from a shag bark hickory, break
it up and use it instead of chips. The first time I used this in my Webber, I
had "inside out rare" pork. The slices had 1/4 inch red borders, but were the
usual pork color in the middle.
Shag bark's are the trees with long loose strips of bark that look ready to
fall off. They are plentiful around my neighborhood, so I take about 1 piece per
year per tree, just to be sure I'm not doing any permanent damage.
|
694.18 | | DNEAST::MAHANEY_MIKE | | Tue Oct 12 1993 08:26 | 3 |
|
I was in Wall-Mart this weekend ans picked up another Brinkman
Smoker for camp for $19.88 on sale.
|
694.19 | Beef Brisket was really chewy | NAC::WALTER | | Fri Sep 27 1996 16:39 | 20 |
694.20 | | lspace.zko.dec.com::winalski | PLIT happens... | Fri Sep 27 1996 16:49 | 6
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