el Ducko
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Cold Smoking in Texas
Yes, Virginia, there`s not only a Santa Claus, but it is also possible to cold smoke in Texas. Like Mr. Clinton said, though, "It depends on what your definition of `IS` is." By cold smoke, I mean, limiting smoke temperature to ten degrees or less above ambient temperature. If you time it right, though (start when it`s cool), you`ll do fine.
Smoker: I brought home a brand new "CookMaster by MasterBuilt" smoker from Bass Pro a few days ago. (Somebody spray-painted "CHEAP" on my pickup while I was double-parked, picking the thing up to save shipping, the bums.) I got it home, assembled it, hooked up the propane, filled the smoker chip box with cheaps, and turned it on as low is it would go. The result- - couldn`t get it below about 230 deg.F, no matter what I did. This is fine for brisket, maybe, but not for cold smoking.
Venturi Smoker: After consulting you fine folks on Wedliny Domowe, I visited the aquarium store and the hardware store and bought makin`s for a venturi smoker. Being a retired engineer, I looked up how a venturi works, and kept muttering mantras to Mssrs. Joule and Thompson as I assembled the thing. The body is a 1/2" by 1/2" by 1/2" PVC tee. For the straight run inlet, I drilled a hole in a cap to accept 1/4" copper tubing, and hooked the aquarium air pump`s discharge tubing to it. For the straight run out, I inserted a union, threaded on one side to accept a barb fitting, and ran some 5/8" tubing up into the base of my smoker. For the tee`s side inlet, I threaded a union and attached an upside down 16 ounce soup can. The open top, now bottom, could be filled with wood chips. I bent a piece of metal mesh gutter cover to hold the chips in.
I discovered several things while tinkering with it.
● Don`t fill the can more than half way. The pressure drop through the chips is too high, so they go out instead of smolder.
● Venturi operation depends on having a good, high air flow that makes up most of the volume of gas going through the venturi. My aquarium pump wasn`t up to the job. I tried several positions with the copper tubing and settled on one which was up inside the barbed discharge fitting, taking up about half the available cross sectional area. It moved smoke, but not enough to satisfy me.
● Use an electrical hotplate to supply heat for the chips. I first tried a butane lighter, but couldn`t get it to catch. Next I tried a propane torch, and it caught, alright. I dropped the hot can and it nearly caught everything on fire. Finally, I used a hot plate. ...a good, high-powered one. Steady heat supply means steady smoke supply. Once the chips in the can start smoldering, the power can be cut off, but it will be needed again before long. Might as well keep it on.
Smoke lasted about 3-1/2 hours. Smoke volume was low. Conclusion: disappointing.
Inside Smoke generator: This time, I held the soup can right-side up. I installed a barbed fitting in the bottom, to accept the aquarium pump discharge tubing. I drilled two more 1/2" holes so I could light the chips. I threaded the tubing up through the burner opening in the bottom of the smoker, attached the can, lit it (required a butane torch), and closed the door.
To make a long story short, this option required much fumbling with the can to keep it lit. There was no way to put the can on the hot plate, because of the location of the air tubing. Smoke temperature climbed beyond 20 degrees above ambient, which was unacceptable. Removing the tubing, I could use a hot plate, but the smoke temperature soared.
A-Maze-N Clone: I folded some aluminum foil into a sort of "M" shape, and tried to imitate the Amaze-N- Smoker. These things sell for $50, and you have to buy sawdust or special pellets. Being somewhat cheap, I tried to generate my own wood dust by grinding chips in my spice grinder (former coffee grinder). It nearly destroyed the grinder, made dust out of some wood and didn`t do much to the rest of the chips... I tried burning both wood dust and shredded chips in the aluminum. Even with the butane torch, I couldn`t keep it lit, let alone generate any smoke. I concluded that
● I couldn`t clone it, and
● The for-sale version is expensive, plus it ties you to their wood supplies.
External Smoke Generator: Stan Marianski`s books talk about external smoke generators for smoke houses. Clearly, I needed smoke generated outside my smoker, and some means of cooling the smoke. For my first attempt, I tried the "can of chips on a hot plate" smoke generator, and mounted a funnel in the opening on the bottom of the smoker where the grease cup is supposed to go. It worked pretty well, although only about half the smoke went up the funnel.
I remembered some of Ssorlih`s posts. Ross outlined a smoke generator which channeled smoke through a downspout to his smoker. I also remembered several references to Alton Brown`s cardbox smoker episode on the television show, "Good Eats."
This time, I have the wood chip box that came with my smoker, seated on an electric hot plate, covered by a cardboard box. A hole in the side, high up, accepts one end of a ten foot aluminum downspout. The other hooks into a 90 degree "flat" elbow to go sideways, then a 90 degree elbow to go up. I connected that elbow to the smoker by attaching an oval downspout clip (whatever it`s named?), and used a Radio Shack "nibbling tool" to chew a larger opening where the grease cup hangs. Smoke goes from the box, up the downspout (where it cools), up into the smoker. Thanks to running the hot plate continuously, I need only shake the wood chip box once an hour, add chips every 2nd or 3rd hour, and can smoke all I need. ...but only if I start early in the day. Texas afternoons still are hot. (It won`t be long, though, until they`ll be too cold.)
One other nicety- - Gulyas suggested that a chimney was necessary, and the gusty local winds occasionally blew smoke downward and out the bottom burner opening, rather than letting it go out the vent on the back of the cabinet (near the top). I used an old piece of sheet metal to construct a squared-off wind baffle, which solves the problem nicely.
"Cold" Smoke: So there you have it- - a "cold" smoker that consistently runs only five to eight degrees above ambient for hours at a time. It`s working great on "Project B" casbaii, which requires four` days of smoking. I smoke for four hours a day, beginning mornings, which leaves plenty of time for other chores.
...or not.
