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Poll: wood chunks or chips on BGE?

Do you use chunks or chips for hot smoking?
Marshall in Beautiful Fruit Cove, FL.
MiniMax 04/17
Unofficial BGE MiniMax Evangelist
Facebook Big Green Egg MiniMax Owners Group


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Comments

  • Chips for short cooks, chunks for long ones.
    Cincinnati, Ohio. Large BGE since 2011. Still learning.
  • RedSkip
    RedSkip Posts: 1,400
    edited November 2016
    Primarily chunks, only use chips because I got them as an Xmas gift.  Once I run out, chunks.
    Large BGE - McDonald, PA
  • Sea2Ski
    Sea2Ski Posts: 4,131
    edited November 2016
    Chunks or sticks. I have been a big fan of sticks recently. 

    Chips if I am going really fast or only need the smallest hint of smoke. 
    --------------------------------------------------
    Burning lump in Downingtown, PA or diesel in Cape May, NJ.
    ....just look for the smoke!
    Large and MiniMax
    --------------------------------------------------

    Caliking said:   Meat in bung is my favorite. 
  • pgprescott
    pgprescott Posts: 14,544
    I use both for long cooks and just chips for shorter cooks or those I would prefer less smoke profile. 
  • DoubleEgger
    DoubleEgger Posts: 19,166
    edited November 2016
    Chunks. I use a hatchet to split the chunks into smaller pieces when needed. I'd rather do this than store a bunch of chips 
  • Hans61
    Hans61 Posts: 3,901
    Both
    “There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
    Coach Finstock Teen Wolf
  • Elijah
    Elijah Posts: 878
    Chunks. I use chips when I get them, but I don't buy them. 
  • Whatever works and is handy. Chips, chunks, twigs, bark. 

    If the smoke smells good, it is good. 

    A chip may be used up more quickly than a chunk, but it doesn't *burn* any faster. Just more chips, as much as would amount to a chunk in total

    i also find the smaller stuff easier to add later. And i work it into the lump in the center, so that as the fire travels, it encounters new material, rather than leaving a single chunk high and dry

  • lousubcap
    lousubcap Posts: 36,764
    Both here and usually lean to the chunks on the long cooks.  It all burns.  
    Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood.  Life is too short for light/lite beer!  Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint.  
  • FATC1TY
    FATC1TY Posts: 888
    Chunks. Chips are a waste of time to me. They catch on fire too easy and do indeed burn up faster. 

    I'm also partial to fruitawood for my smoking woods and find their stuff is much higher quality than the dried up plastic bag stuff at your hardware stores. 
    -FATC1TY
    Grillin' and Brewing in Atlanta
    LBGE
    MiniMax
  • Chunks
    Charlotte, NC - Large BGE 2014, Maverick ET 733, Thermopen, Nest, Platesetter, Woo2 and Extender w/Grid, Kick Ash Basket, Pizza Stone, SS Smokeware Cap, Blackstone 36"
  • WeberWho
    WeberWho Posts: 11,526
    Chips are nice for poultry and chunks for everything else
    "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
  • bgebrent
    bgebrent Posts: 19,636
    Primarily chunks but I really don't think it matters.
    Sandy Springs & Dawsonville Ga
  • Chunks
    Living the good life smoking and joking
  • NPHuskerFL
    NPHuskerFL Posts: 17,629
    Both.
    Chunks typically on L&S
    Chips on hot & fast...especially poultry and fish 
    LBGE 2013 & MM 2014
    Die Hard HUSKER & BRONCO FAN
    Flying Low & Slow in "Da Burg" FL
  • NPHuskerFL
    NPHuskerFL Posts: 17,629
    LBGE 2013 & MM 2014
    Die Hard HUSKER & BRONCO FAN
    Flying Low & Slow in "Da Burg" FL
  • YukonRon
    YukonRon Posts: 17,261
    I'm use chunks, dry.
    If I'm need smaller, I reduce the size of the chunks. I quit buying chips because I waste more than I'd use.
    "Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber

    XL and MM
    Louisville, Kentucky
  • lousubcap
    lousubcap Posts: 36,764
    @JustineCaseyFeldown ; right back to your Ford vs. Chevy discussion on the old forum.  The circle of smoke wood completes another lap.  
    Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood.  Life is too short for light/lite beer!  Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint.  
  • Teefus
    Teefus Posts: 1,259
    Chunks for 30 years with my Weber, and continuing the practice with the BGE. 
    Michiana, South of the border.
  • SkySaw
    SkySaw Posts: 656
    I put wood on the fire immediately before I put the platesetter and the cooking grid on. Using this method I only use chunks. I can see where to put chunks so that they will begin to burn sooner or later. When I've used chips I find that the chips immediately light on fire and many of them have burned by the time I get the platesetter and cooking grid on. By the time the Egg is stabilized with the platesetter the chips have almost all burned away. Chunks every time.
  • Hans61
    Hans61 Posts: 3,901
    SkySaw said:
    I put wood on the fire immediately before I put the platesetter and the cooking grid on. Using this method I only use chunks. I can see where to put chunks so that they will begin to burn sooner or later. When I've used chips I find that the chips immediately light on fire and many of them have burned by the time I get the platesetter and cooking grid on. By the time the Egg is stabilized with the platesetter the chips have almost all burned away. Chunks every time.
    Try mixing the chips in with your ash tool before lighting 
    “There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
    Coach Finstock Teen Wolf
  • lousubcap
    lousubcap Posts: 36,764
    As above, I will mix the chips or chunks with the initial lump load.  That way as the fire moves it will continue to encounter smoke wood.  
    Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood.  Life is too short for light/lite beer!  Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint.  
  • pgprescott
    pgprescott Posts: 14,544
    FYI. No need to have continuous smoke throughout the cook. I wouldn't worry if the smoke subsides part of the way into the cook. I run into this all the time at the shop. Guys worried cuz the smoking wood was used up. No worries. 
  • HeavyG
    HeavyG Posts: 10,380
    I primarily use chunks but I also keep pellets on hand for use with my Amazen tray and tubes.

    One other thing about pellets is they will fall thru the grates of most of my grills so I have found it useful a few times to be able to scatter a handful of pellets on the grate to have them fall thru onto the fire if I wanted to create a bit more smoke.


    “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” ― Philip K. Diçk




  • How Would a roast know it's being smoked by chips versus a chunk?

    if you have a chunk that fills your hand, and a handful of chips, it's the same amount of wood. 

    Given that a smoking fire is small, and travels, you need to settle that chunk into the fire and hope the fire doesn't burn away from it. 

    Or you can spread the same amount of chips in the general area of the fire

    point is, when your chunk stops smoking, and the fire has moved on to new lump, your smoke stops. 

    With smaller pieces of wood, you can shotgun it a bit. And the fire will keep bumping into new wood

    this isn't an open fire, like a campfire. Chips don't ignite and burn up. They smolder just like chunks do. They burn the same and at the same rate

    It isn't about one being 'better', it's about how to use one or the other. And not to avoid one type just because it isn't available

    use what you have, and understand how to use it, and you will have smoke without issue. 



    the caveat, as you stated, is that the chips have to be spread out.  If you dump a fist full of chips in the same spot where the fire is they will burn faster due to more surface area exposed vs a chunk.
    Large BGE
    BBQ Guru DigiQ II

    Martensville, Saskatchewan Canada
  • Hans61
    Hans61 Posts: 3,901
    How Would a roast know it's being smoked by chips versus a chunk?

    if you have a chunk that fills your hand, and a handful of chips, it's the same amount of wood. 

    Given that a smoking fire is small, and travels, you need to settle that chunk into the fire and hope the fire doesn't burn away from it. 

    Or you can spread the same amount of chips in the general area of the fire

    point is, when your chunk stops smoking, and the fire has moved on to new lump, your smoke stops. 

    With smaller pieces of wood, you can shotgun it a bit. And the fire will keep bumping into new wood

    this isn't an open fire, like a campfire. Chips don't ignite and burn up. They smolder just like chunks do. They burn the same and at the same rate

    It isn't about one being 'better', it's about how to use one or the other. And not to avoid one type just because it isn't available

    use what you have, and understand how to use it, and you will have smoke without issue. 



    the caveat, as you stated, is that the chips have to be spread out.  If you dump a fist full of chips in the same spot where the fire is they will burn faster due to more surface area exposed vs a chunk.
    The chips should also be stirred into the lump with the ash tool before lighting imo 
    “There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
    Coach Finstock Teen Wolf