It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
I want to try my first planked seafood this weekend, and the egg site advises using the porceline (ceramic?) coated grate to plank on. I just have the standard stainless one that came with the egg. I can't imagine it makes a difference but thought I'd ask before I screw something up.
Thanks, Lemonade Nate
Comments
- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like"Entrepreneurs are simply those who understand that there is little difference between obstacle and opportunity and are able to turn both to their advantage."
- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Likelogic is a spare commodity these days
- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Likeidea behind soaking is to only DELAY smoking,. if they were to smoke the whole time, the cedar smoke would be way too strong. you soak, and anout ten minutes into the cook you start to pick up smoke.
it's a bastardized version of the way fish wash cooked or dried/smoked on an open camp fire. stretched and pinned to cedar boards to dry, inevitably they'd start to smoke. and someone discovered that the taste wasn't a;together bad afterall.
if you do them direct as you mention, you get no smoke, which is kinda pointless.
- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeThrow them on the egg after the egg is warmed up and give them the slightest of slightest burn marks
I take them oh and coat both sides in olive oil
Throw the salmon on them and throw them back on the egg for direct cook
Since I started this method, my planks don't catch fire and are reusable
- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeThe planks are cheap, just try doing a cook direct with just soaking the planks. I was also reusing my planks about 3 times before discarding. Then I did it direct. The wood was burned, but the fish was amazing. Maybe I just got some really good salmon, better than I'd had before, but two cooks back to back letting the planks literally burn gave me the best salmon I've ever had.
- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Likesoaking chips and chunks to keep them from burning isn't required, because they don't burst into flame (in an air tight egg) anyway. the lots of 'smoke' you see from soaked chips/chunks is mostly steam, not smoke. so no need to soak, unless you like the visual white (white=water) 'smoke'
so why soak a plank? well, to delay smoking. maybe not wioth a maple plank, but cedar is resinous, and too much cedar smoke can be a bad thing.
it isn't a contradiction to say "no need to soak chips/chunks" and ten minutes later advocate soaking cedar planks.
always look to the reason for doing something. what does soaking achieve? with lo and slow, soaking doesn't accomplish anything. but in a plank situation, where the thing can start smoking too early (meaning: for the whole time the meat is in the grill), that may not be a good thing with cedar.
@doc... the cedar flavors the fish from smoke. don't need a lot. the wood can't flavor the meat by mere contact. for one, there's skin. for another, how would the TOP of the fish pick up the cedar flavor? it wouldn't, not by contact.
the idea is to limit the smoke. a little, not a lot. because you are right, too much and it'll taste like eating a pine tree.
the tradition comes from using wood as a cooking vessel. on an open fire, you'd better soak the wood or the thing will burst into flame. with the fish on a plank at a bit of a distance, the smoke is minimized. smoke was originally a by product. now it's the point.
- Spam
- Abuse
- Troll
0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree Like