Welcome to the EGGhead Forum - a great place to visit and packed with tips and EGGspert advice! You can also join the conversation and get more information and amazing kamado recipes by following Big Green Egg to Experience our World of Flavor™ at:
Facebook  |  Twitter  |  Instagram  |  Pinterest  |  Youtube  |  Vimeo
Share your photos by tagging us and using the hashtag #BigGreenEgg.

Want to see how the EGG is made? Click to Watch

Is it ok to add hickory wood chunks while cooking a butt?

Is hickory a good choice to add while cooking a butt?  

Comments

  • SmokeyPitt
    SmokeyPitt Posts: 10,490
    Hickory is a great choice for pork.  I normally don't add during the cook just because it is difficult in the egg, but if you already have the butt going and not enough smoke there is no harm in adding some.  


    Which came first the chicken or the egg?  I egged the chicken and then I ate his leg. 

  • What SmokeyPitt said.  Hickory does burn a little hotter than oak, but not as hot as the fruit woods.  Just don't add too much at once or spread it around so that it doesn't burn all at the same time and you'll be fine.
  • WeberWho
    WeberWho Posts: 11,527
    +1 what they said above. I would add it to the lump at the beginning of the cook. Your meat absorbs the most smoke at the beginning stages 
    "The pig is an amazing animal. You feed a pig an apple and it makes bacon. Let's see Michael Phelps do that" - Jim Gaffigan

    Minnesota
  • WeberWho? said:
    +1 what they said above. I would add it to the lump at the beginning of the cook. Your meat absorbs the most smoke at the beginning stages 
    smoke will actually flavor the meat no matter when you add it.  the smoke ring is what is affected earlier in the cook. but you can add more smoke at any time.


    [social media disclaimer: irony and sarcasm may be used in some or all of user's posts; emoticon usage is intended to indicate moderately jocular social interaction; the comments toward users, their usernames, and the real people (living or dead) that they refer to are not intended to be adversarial in nature; those replying to this user are entering into a tacit agreement that they are real-life or social-media acquaintances and/or have agreed to or tacitly agreed to perpetrate occasional good-natured ribbing between and among themselves and others]

  • WeberWho
    WeberWho Posts: 11,527
    edited October 2015
    WeberWho? said:
    +1 what they said above. I would add it to the lump at the beginning of the cook. Your meat absorbs the most smoke at the beginning stages 
    smoke will actually flavor the meat no matter when you add it.  the smoke ring is what is affected earlier in the cook. but you can add more smoke at any time.


    You can add smoke anytime you want but your meat won't penetrate it as it would in the beginning of the cook
    "The pig is an amazing animal. You feed a pig an apple and it makes bacon. Let's see Michael Phelps do that" - Jim Gaffigan

    Minnesota
  • logchief
    logchief Posts: 1,431
    edited October 2015
    WeberWho? said:
    WeberWho? said:
    +1 what they said above. I would add it to the lump at the beginning of the cook. Your meat absorbs the most smoke at the beginning stages 
    smoke will actually flavor the meat no matter when you add it.  the smoke ring is what is affected earlier in the cook. but you can add more smoke at any time.


    You can add smoke anytime you want but your meat won't penetrate it as it would in the beginning of the cook
    +1


    LBGE - I like the hot stuff.  The big dry San Joaquin Valley, Clovis, CA 
  • Darby_Crenshaw
    Darby_Crenshaw Posts: 2,657
    edited October 2015
    smoke doesn't penetrate the meat at all.

    the wicked- in nitrates do, which cause the smoke ring.

    but the flavor doesn't penetrate

    even if it did, how could the smoke (a physical particle many thousand times larger than a nitric acid molecule) penetrate further than the smoke ring (which has no smoke flavor itself), which is being wicked/drawn into the meat?

    many myths about bbq.  the biggest is smoke penetration

    the "early in the cook" myth is a direct result of people observing smoke ring formation, and yes, that stops when the meat hits 140 or so (i.e. 'early in the cook'), but the smoke never penetrates.  which means it always adds flavor, just only on the outside.



    [social media disclaimer: irony and sarcasm may be used in some or all of user's posts; emoticon usage is intended to indicate moderately jocular social interaction; the comments toward users, their usernames, and the real people (living or dead) that they refer to are not intended to be adversarial in nature; those replying to this user are entering into a tacit agreement that they are real-life or social-media acquaintances and/or have agreed to or tacitly agreed to perpetrate occasional good-natured ribbing between and among themselves and others]

  • WeberWho
    WeberWho Posts: 11,527
    Good video with Arron Franklin that describes science and smoke

    https://youtu.be/ccqOVmsybO4
    "The pig is an amazing animal. You feed a pig an apple and it makes bacon. Let's see Michael Phelps do that" - Jim Gaffigan

    Minnesota
  • i like harold mcgee.  nothin to sell, no brand to pimp.
    [social media disclaimer: irony and sarcasm may be used in some or all of user's posts; emoticon usage is intended to indicate moderately jocular social interaction; the comments toward users, their usernames, and the real people (living or dead) that they refer to are not intended to be adversarial in nature; those replying to this user are entering into a tacit agreement that they are real-life or social-media acquaintances and/or have agreed to or tacitly agreed to perpetrate occasional good-natured ribbing between and among themselves and others]

  • WeberWho
    WeberWho Posts: 11,527
    "The pig is an amazing animal. You feed a pig an apple and it makes bacon. Let's see Michael Phelps do that" - Jim Gaffigan

    Minnesota
  • MaskedMarvel
    MaskedMarvel Posts: 3,423
    Starring this thread for an potentially awesome argument * :)
    Large BGE and Medium BGE
    36" Blackstone - Greensboro!


  • nolaegghead
    nolaegghead Posts: 42,109
    Smoke is the combination of particulates, gasses and water vapor.  The particulates settle on the surface, condensable gasses condense on the surface, nitrous oxides react with moisture and do permeate the meat (smoke ring).  Water vapor is what gives us a little more humidity over a more open smoker but we generally don't give a F about it.  CO2 doesn't have any effect and goes out the stack.
    ______________________________________________
    I love lamp..