What are you smoking?

Joined
Jul 1, 2013
Messages
3,380
Location
Ottumwa, Iowa
Okay lets do one of these threads for smoked food.

I have to smoke 120lbs of pork loin for an FFA banquet. Using Meat Church Honey Hog BBQ and apple wood. Had to cut 6-8 inches off of each loin to fit them in the smoker and can only get 2 loins to a rack. Going to have to do 3 loads by the time I get all the end pieces done. Should have started sooner.

IMG_20240428_114638885.webp
 
I envy you guys who can smoke. I love good meat but when I tried my hand at smoking I ended up with terrible tough meat. I gotta learn how to balance the moisture, smoke time and whatever else I didn't do right! I can grill like a Boss but can't smoke lol. Fortunately there are several really good BBQ places in the area!
 
I envy you guys who can smoke. I love good meat but when I tried my hand at smoking I ended up with terrible tough meat. I gotta learn how to balance the moisture, smoke time and whatever else I didn't do right! I can grill like a Boss but can't smoke lol. Fortunately there are several really good BBQ places in the area!
Get a digital electric smoker. They are easy to use.
 
I envy you guys who can smoke. I love good meat but when I tried my hand at smoking I ended up with terrible tough meat. I gotta learn how to balance the moisture, smoke time and whatever else I didn't do right! I can grill like a Boss but can't smoke lol. Fortunately there are several really good BBQ places in the area!
Learn about brining first.

Learn what a pelicle is.

Smoking will come easy after that.
 
For brining, I've all but abandoned wet brines. Everything is dry brined now. If the gram scale won't weigh more than a few oz/grams, you'll need a scale big enough to weigh meat.

For plain smoking, say a beef chuck or a brisket or a pork butt, I don't weigh anything. I eyeball.

For everything else, I cure or brine or both - and I weigh my seasonings.

Even if you just weigh simple dishes like meatloaf and find a salt level you like (mine is 1.65%) then you can use that salt percentage in everything. These are quick examples. I can point you to a forum where you can learn everything from salami/salume making to sausages to smoked meats to about everything you can ever image. I've learned and am now consistently successful with sausage (both fresh and cured), bacon, ham, and a few other cured whole muscle meats. I've been doing briskets and butts since Moses wore short pants, those to me are easy.

Examples: Not cured. Cured would need more than 'cliff's notes post'

1 14lb beef brisket, salt and black pepper. LIBERALLY coat both brisket sides in salt and pepper. When it looks like too much, add a little more. It's done when a temperature probe in the middle of the flat reads somewhere between 195F and 205F. The probe will go into the temp point and feel like you are probing a jar of peanut butter or a moist dense cake.

1 9lb pork butt. Liberally coat with mustard and a rub of your choice. I make my own, but am not against commercial rubs. Apply enough rub and then apply some more. Cook it until the probe temp is 203ish. Pull apart and mix it all up, now you have pulled pork.

1 4lb pork belly (my way, I do not cube it before the first cook) and enough rub to liberally rub both sides. Smoke 2-3 hours at about 250. Remove from smoker, cube into 1" chunks, apply more rub, place chunks into pan and sauce with favorite sauce. Finish in smoker or oven. These are done based on color for me pretty much. There is so much fat you really can't overcook them.
 
Pulled the loins when they hit 145-150 and reloaded with 5 full loins and six halves. Still have six halves to go. Then they got wrapped in tinfoil and will be put in the fridge till Wednesday. Then they will sliced and heated in a roaster.

What should we put on them when they go in the roaster?
 
I envy you guys who can smoke. I love good meat but when I tried my hand at smoking I ended up with terrible tough meat. I gotta learn how to balance the moisture, smoke time and whatever else I didn't do right! I can grill like a Boss but can't smoke lol. Fortunately there are several really good BBQ places in the area!
Your friend is low and slow. Low temperature for longer periods of time. Meat choice is also a factor. What have you tried to smoke? I’d be glad to give you some pointers if you’re interested. I’ve made a bit of a hobby out of smoking. My neighbors usually enjoy it. The smell and I send samples.

I never brine my smoked meats. I spritz pulled pork and brisket. Most items I smoke until 165F then I wrap it. Pulled pork with foil, brisket with butcher paper.

Just my $0.02
 
Your friend is low and slow. Low temperature for longer periods of time. Meat choice is also a factor. What have you tried to smoke? I’d be glad to give you some pointers if you’re interested. I’ve made a bit of a hobby out of smoking. My neighbors usually enjoy it. The smell and I send samples.

I never brine my smoked meats. I spritz pulled pork and brisket. Most items I smoke until 165F then I wrap it. Pulled pork with foil, brisket with butcher paper.

Just my $0.02
I was doing ribs in an electric smoker. Had the water cup full and using the mesquite wood chips. I did not do any prep - just slapped them in there and turned it on lol.
 
@GMBoy

Here are a couple simple tips.

OH - what brand of smoker? Can you control the temperature? Mesquite is not the easiest wood to smoke with IMHO. Try apple or alder.

I wrote the bellow as if you had a pellet smoker.

Poultry brined vs unbrined, brine - wet or dry - wins every time in my book. Unbrined smoked chicken is good, but it's basically roasted chicken because well chicken needs a bit higher internal temps and the brine keeps it nice and moist and helps it absorb smoke flavor.

Salmon is great dry brined, but wet brine works well, IMHO. The trick is letting a nice pellicle form.
Pellicles of protein that form prior to smoking meat (including fish and poultry) allow smoke to better adhere to the surface of the meat during the smoking process. Useful in all smoking applications and with any kind of animal protein, it is best used with fish where the flesh of a fish such as salmon forms a pellicle that will attract more smoke to adhere to it than would be the case if it had not been used.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellicle_(cooking)

Now beef doesn't need a brine, this is true. But a nice dry rub and slow and low. You want a fatty cut, no one wants a dry brisket.

Pork is easy and takes nicely to a brine of any variety. Even smoked pork chops.

Thing is with smoke, yes low and slow and don't let your eye fool you. You really don't want gobs of blue/white smoke. A few wafts of smoke are OK, just light smoke and time does the trick.

So I would start with a pork butt, small one. Not too much $. Rub your butt with some salt and pepper and whatever spices you like. I never weigh this kind of dry rub. Let it sit in the fridge over night (or not). If you use a LOT of salt rinse it off and dry really well. Let it sit in fridge or 2-3 hours after rinse. Then smoke the thing, low and slow
 
I was doing ribs in an electric smoker. Had the water cup full and using the mesquite wood chips. I did not do any prep - just slapped them in there and turned it on lol.
Ribs tend to be easier and a good place to start. First step is to remove the membrane on the bone side. I apply some dry rub on both sides and cook them bone side down. You can trim them but I usually don’t. Remember 3-2-1. 3 hours of smoke at 225F, 2 hours wrapped in foil with pats or butter and brown sugar. 1 hour of sauced on the smoker at 225 to caramelize the sauce. They will be fall of the bone enjoyable.

Just my $0.02
 
Back
Top Bottom