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Smoking chicken and fish

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bob golding:
we cold smoke salmon and bacon. you want to keep below 15c/20c the biggest problem is having it cols enouth outside to cold smoke. we do it in the winter. west cornwall. think you are a bit colder over there. we use oak left over form making a yurt. there are people selling smoking chips in the uk should be able to buy them over there as well. i use a single electric hotplate with a cast iron frying pan. i use a inverted 7 inch cake tin over the  frying pan with large chicken noodle tin over the top. this fits nicely inside a length of flexible flue liner about 1.5 metres long that goes into a iron dustbin using another chicken noodle tin. there are racks near the top of the dustbin to hang the salmon and bacon from the lid of the dustbin has a hole and ,yes you've guessed it another chicken noodle tin and a bit more pipe. each fill of the frying pan lasts about 2 hours. you have to keep an eye on it as if any air gets in it will burn and raise the temperature to high. i seal the edges between the cake tin and the frying pan with wet sand.

that's the easy part. the secret is in the preparation of the salmon and bacon. it has to be salt cured in the fridge for a few days before you smoke.  i don't do that side of the operation so cant help.

that is for cold smoking for preserving. hot smoking is a lot easier and is just another form of cooking really.
we do enough salmon and bacon to last for a year. we carefully wrap it in greaseproof paper and seal it in a freezer bag and it keeps for a year in the freezer.

may have to dig some out after all that!!!

badkins100:
Never expected to see a cooking question in here with all the battery acid and fuel smells. ;D

You can make a cold smoker with a cheap pencil type soldering iron, a bean can (clean preferably), and your favorite wood chips. Use any container as the smoke house, an old grill, or turn a cardboard box over it all.

Take an empty bean can and punch about 3 pencil size holes near the top equally spaced.

Poke a hole through the bottom so the soldering iron will fit through it snugly with the tip fully inside the can.

Insert soldering iron, drop in wood chips (dry, not soaked), plug in the soldering iron, and place the can's lid on. Our can opener cuts the seam of the lid, so it will fit back on fairly nicely. 

If you have enough room to keep the can a few inches away from under the meats, that will help prevent heat getting to the meats also.

I have not tried this yet, but have read on the internetwhere others have successfully used it . So I has to be true. ::)  It is on my list of things to do, because I like cooler smoke temps on my meats before adding the heat to cook and finish them.

JW:

 Been looking for this thread to figure out what to marinade my raw salmon in. found it, now if I can find the Thai Chicken recipe

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