Let's Talk BBQ
General => General Discussion & Topics => General Discussion => Topic started by: LostArrow on August 04, 2013, 11:01:10 PM
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"Who at LTBBQ was supposed to remind me to not use too much flavor wood in my charcoal?
I thought Smoochy had my back
Everything about the turkey was great......moist......tender......just a little too much smoke for me and the wife.
I used ONE piece of cherry that was 2 inches by 5 inches......still too much.
No more wood in my charcoal!"
Too little smoke flavor is still very good, too much not so much :o
Why I gave my Lectric smoker away!
With any new cooker I start with a little wood & work up.
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Was not me! But I am surprised that little amount of wood caused that much smoke flavor
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While my wife would agree with the too much smoke, I don't think there is such a thing.
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With turkey and chicken it doesn't take much some days -- they absorb smoke like sponges when the conditions are right. Better luck next time.
Hub
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"Who at LTBBQ was supposed to remind me to not use too much flavor wood in my charcoal?
I thought Smoochy had my back
Everything about the turkey was great......moist......tender......just a little too much smoke for me and the wife.
I used ONE piece of cherry that was 2 inches by 5 inches......still too much.
No more wood in my charcoal!"
Too little smoke flavor is still very good, too much not so much :o
Why I gave my Lectric smoker away!
With any new cooker I start with a little wood & work up.
this should be a sticky thing. it sums up my entire bbq life. everyone wants great smoke flavor. but to much smoke on food is real icky. I use to think throw 4 pieces of wood on the WSM and let her rip. stupid. I now only put 1 or 2 pieces of wood on and weight them. not all pieces of wood are the same. some of the same size in the same species are way heavier. and only light smoking wood. pecan, apple, cherry. to me these woods offer a lighter smoke for me. great thread LA. 8)
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It's so easy to add or subtract bisquettes.
Advantage Bradley.
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Towards the end of my charcoal/stick burning days, I mostly used peach, apricot and apple wood.........
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I feel your pain, LA!
Deb is not shy and will let me know right away if there is too much smoke - IH(her)HO. But she's GREAT, too, because she will REALLY let me know when the food it cooked right (more frequently now).
With the offset, I find that I can adjust the amount of smoke by wrapping the meat when I think it is smoked enough. I'll put the butt it a foil pan and cover it to keep it out of the smoke...ribs- I just wrap in foil like I'm supposed to. Since wood is the only fuel in that smoker, I don't know of another way to keep from smokin' as it cooks. Howsomever, I am open to suggestions.
In the MES, I seem to over-smoke everything, so I am going to start from almost no chips and build up from there until I find the right amount for us and our tastes.
The Cajun Injector Barrel Smoker we have is a dream to cook on - especially when it comes to chicken. It is called "the world's best chicken cooker", and after the chicken we cooked Friday, Deb has declared that to be the absolute truth. I can easily adjust the smoke flavor therein by the amount of chunks I put on the charcoal. We have found that cherry wood for chicken makes Deb cheery.
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Not to leave others out.....but I am going to send you a PM to talk about some possible solutions.
Dan
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Boy, until I learned my lesson about over smoking I put out some food that tasted like creosote crossties....only the ties were a little tougher. Got to kiss and caress with thin blue smoke (TBS) rather than assaulting the meat as Bama will do to a Texas A&M QB if he ain't suspended for getting paid for writing his name...which is something no Auburn player could ever be accused of. Dee
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wife does not care for the smoke that much. a fine line but better for me to error on the less side. Now I did do some chicken and some beef with mesquite and that is strong but turned out great. But was not overly smoked.