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Smoking Your Catch/ Rabbits/ Pigeons Etc.


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If Admin` will please allow.

 

Lads have you ever considered smoking your food ?

This is tonight, about to be cold smoking Herring (kippers) and Mackerel. Many a time I`ll use pigeon breast, Rabbit etc.

 

 

please excuse the dustbin in the background :icon_redface:

 

 

atb.

 

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If Admin` will please allow.   Lads have you ever considered smoking your food ? This is tonight, about to be cold smoking Herring (kippers) and Mackerel. Many a time I`l

Just In case anyone else is to lazy like me to make one I just bought this little bad boy off woucher for about £30 Barbie and smoker retail £120 sweet,

have had a shoulder of pork in salt and jerk seasoning for two days, arrived home just now and my parcel of wood chips has arrived so fired it straight up about 30mins ago, applewood is what I,m tryin

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Cold smoke to flavour. Hot smoke to cook.

Most fruit woods are good. Beech and chestnut work well. I find oak a bit overpowering.

I've been refining my smoker for a while but I hot smoke/cook more than I cold smoke.

A large Pork shoulder cooked overnight is an absolute winner.

 

Tidy set up mark :thumbs:

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I`ve still got L plates on with this project lads and simply follow the books I have but the food coming out is delicious - far, far better than commercial she ite.

Yes Moxy you are correct but the stage I am at I simply cook under the grill or in the oven to cook the food after the cold smoking process,- the results have been superb :D.

Gets quite addictive lads, be warned :laugh:.

The hot smoker is an easy build and is next - this is great fun lads and the food is delicious.

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atb

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I built a smoker from a 2 drawer filing cabinet. I wanted it for both hot and cold smoking. I use the ProQ with oak dust for cold smoking getting a 10-11 hour smoke from one filling. It actually makes Edam cheese edible :laugh: . I use a baking tray or a 'home fashioned' metal tray with American White Oak planings, and I like the nuttiness it imparts, also I have quite a bit of it as I put down a solid oak floor (in the house :laugh: ) some years back which I prepared from rough boards :thumbs:

The smoker has a metal flap which I lower to cover the burner for cold smoking, obviously lifting the flap and clipping it against the back wall for hot smoking using a gas burner. It has a small chimney at the top/rear for smoke throughput, and a temperature gauge on the door. It can also be used as a conventional oven, but doesn't have the insulation properties of the proper one which is about 15 ft away, in the kitchen.

 

Home smoking adds another dimension to food instead of some of the shit you buy which is so artificial tasting. I have used both smoke powder and liquid smoke in the past but it just doesn't come near.

 

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I built a smoker from a 2 drawer filing cabinet. I wanted it for both hot and cold smoking. I use the ProQ with oak dust for cold smoking getting a 10-11 hour smoke from one filling. It actually makes Edam cheese edible :laugh: . I use a baking tray or a 'home fashioned' metal tray with American White Oak planings, and I like the nuttiness it imparts, also I have quite a bit of it as I put down a solid oak floor (in the house :laugh: ) some years back which I prepared from rough boards :thumbs:

The smoker has a metal flap which I lower to cover the burner for cold smoking, obviously lifting the flap and clipping it against the back wall for hot smoking using a gas burner. It has a small chimney at the top/rear for smoke throughput, and a temperature gauge on the door. It can also be used as a conventional oven, but doesn't have the insulation properties of the proper one which is about 15 ft away, in the kitchen.

 

Home smoking adds another dimension to food instead of some of the shit you buy which is so artificial tasting. I have used both smoke powder and liquid smoke in the past but it just doesn't come near.

 

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That's a very similar setup to mine.

:thumbs:

 

I collect the sawdust when cutting firewood with the chainsaw. I tried chippings from a wood chipper but they were far too coarse.

Mines lagged so holds heat fairly well without burning loads of gas. Nowhere near as efficient as the oven but it's something a little different.

Optimum temp for a long slow cook is around 160 deg C.

Meats can blacken a little but it's no more than you'd get with your oven and most of the time it's just the seasoning or rub.

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I thought Manx Kippers were good but we`ve eaten most of these cold smoked ones for tea tonight and they were just "outstanding".

 

I`ve picked up a metal cabinet today (free) at the factory that supplies us with the roofline pvc, should make a cracking smoker cabinet.

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I send off for Smoke dust on the internet.

I use the Pro cold smoke generator and the bog standard smoke box you have seen.

I find the best book (s) to use are - Smoking food at home - with smoky Jo and also Curing & smoking ( river cottage handbook no 13)

 

Great for newbies like me :good:

 

Great fun too !

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