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Hickory smoke

Unknown
edited November -0001 in EggHead Forum
Newbie question--- Would you recomend hickory chunks or the little chips for producing smoke for beef and pork, and how much of each??

Comments

  • BlueSmoke
    BlueSmoke Posts: 1,678
    Bucky Buckshot,
    I like un-soaked chunks: they last longer. Two or three fist-size chunks is plenty for almost anything you'd want to smoke.[p]Ken

  • BlueSmoke,
    Thanks Ken for the input. Much appreciated

  • EddieMac
    EddieMac Posts: 423
    I prefer hickory chips.....While the dried chunks do indeed burn considerably longer...there's only so long that the meat will accept the meat flavoring.....And that's in the earliest stages of the cook.......[p]Plus the dried chunks can cause little fired and flare-ups during the cook.....[p]Just my druthers......[p]Ed McLean....eddiemac
    Ft. Pierce, FL[p]

  • The Naked Whiz
    The Naked Whiz Posts: 7,777
    eddiemac,
    Not to disagree, but I'll have to disagree. :-) The smoke flavor will be deposited on the meat as long as there is smoke in the cooker. It is the smoke RING which only forms at lower temperatures, typically below about 140.[p]TNW

    The Naked Whiz
  • The Naked Whiz
    The Naked Whiz Posts: 7,777
    Bucky Buckshot,
    I use chips when I want a burst of smoke for a short period of time. I use chunks for longer cooks. Drbbq had said here that he uses chips that he mixes throughout the lump. So, there you have a bunch of options![p]TNW

    The Naked Whiz
  • stike
    stike Posts: 15,597
    Bucky Buckshot,
    good lord, yes. one of (if not THE)traditional smoking wood.[p]any hardwoods, oak, maple, etc.
    fruit woods; cherry, etc.[p]all good.
    some folks debate whether to use wood with bark on it, but i don't quibble.[p]i'm of the mind that folks likely didn't pick thru wood and de-bark it when the tradition got started, and that they used local woods. that doesn't mean not to use guava, not at all, just means that usually what you have on hand locally for hardwood should be great.[p]

    ed egli avea del cul fatto trombetta -Dante
  • stike
    stike Posts: 15,597
    The Naked Whiz,
    yep.
    keep spreading the truth and someday this myth'll go away (not bloody likely though!)

    ed egli avea del cul fatto trombetta -Dante
  • stike
    stike Posts: 15,597
    The Naked Whiz,
    chips sticks chunk and heck, even bark.[p]whatever smokes and smells/tastes good doing so

    ed egli avea del cul fatto trombetta -Dante
  • SirKeats
    SirKeats Posts: 159
    Bucky Buckshot,[p]I use chunks for longer cooks... chips don't last long enough. Remember, your meat can accept smoke up to something like 145 or so. After that you won't get any more of a smoke ring... but I don't know that chips would last through the 145 mark on most chunks of meat.[p]I do, however, use chips on things like burgers. I know I'm not cooking them long enough to really absorb much of any smoke, so I want a LOT of smoke and I want it fast... so I toss a handful of chips on there to just engulf the burgers so at the very least some of that flavor sticks to the outside.[p]jmho though.
  • Spin
    Spin Posts: 1,375
    Bucky Buckshot,[p]The chip/chunk preference greatly depends on how much smoke flavor people tend to like in the meal. Smoking early in the cook (at the start) adds a smoke flavor that tends to penetrate the meal and the flavoe is very mild. Smoking later in the cook tends to deposit a stronger smoke flavor in the meal.[p]Chips tend to burn out quicker than chunks, but if you mix the chips in with the lump you will get a mild smoke the entire cook.[p]Can work either one equally well. The only advantage of chunks is they are easier to remove from the left over lump if the next cook doesn't want smoke.[p]Spin

  • CT Grillguy
    CT Grillguy Posts: 149
    Bucky Buckshot,[p]I'm new to smoking food, but I recently bought a bag of Hickory chunks. I have used them with great success and I feel like they make the food a bit less smokey than the chips. I don't know why that is. I like to find one nice chunk and place it in the middle of the lump to start out. We're not big smoke flavor people, so we don't want too much, and this method works perfect for our tastes. So far I've used Hickory on Brisket, Ribs, and a Steak. All great.
  • fishlessman
    fishlessman Posts: 34,589
    Bucky Buckshot,
    i use 1 chunk of hickory mixed with 1 or 2 chunks of cherry for most low and slows. i dont like too much hickory smoke as it seems to be bitter to me, but its fine mixed in with a little fruit wood

    fukahwee maine

    you can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it
  • fishlessman,
    Thanks a million to everyone who contributed to my hickory smoke lesson. Proves once again how important this forum is to all of us with less experience in cooking on the BGE

  • stike
    stike Posts: 15,597
    SirKeats,
    i mix cips throughout the lump, so no matter where the fire travels, it'll still find fresh wood to smoke with.[p]it's 140 where the ring stops forming, but the flavor still lands on the meat up til the second it comes off the egg. i don't like it over-smoked, but there is flavor being added after the outer surface portion of the meat hits 140 (not the internal temp).[p]the exterior portion hits 140 well before the internal probe would reister 140.

    ed egli avea del cul fatto trombetta -Dante