TBDonnelly
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2005
- Messages
- 1,402
- Tractor
- Kioti CK30HST, KL130 FEL, turf tires
Being a novice to this whole thing, I'll say this. I put a foil packet of chips in that I didn't soak. They burst into flames, made some smoke and were gone in about 10 minutes. I put a foil packet of wet chips that had soaked for about an hour. They took about 20 minutes to start smoking, and then they smoked for a good while longer than 10 minutes. :laughing: Anyhow, I threw in a handful of dry chips right on the coals, and they also burst into flames, raised the temp in the smoker quite a bit, and were gone in 10 minutes as well. So I threw a handful of wet chips directly on the coals, they started smoking in about 5 minutes, and they dropped the temp in the smoker a little bit, but not much at all. They smoked for about 20-30 minutes and when they were gone I noticed the smoker temp had risen a bit.
Nothing scientific for me yet. No recorded measurements. No thermometer on the fire or smoker. Only the dial on the Brinkman that says WARM, IDEAL, HOT. It tends to get to the high side of IDEAL very easily and stays there. Add some coals and it goes up. Add some dry wood chips and it goes up faster. Add some wet wood chips and it cools down. I did use a meat thermometer after two hours on the chicken and three on the pork loin just to be sure it was hot all the way through.
Anyhow, it was darn tasty both times. :thumbsup: I'm thinking about a turkey next weekend. :licking:
I use (dry)wood chunks opposed to wood chips, the chunks smoke for a longer period. If you watch the wood chips they will burn.:laughing: close the lid to reduce the oxygen level. Wet wood releases steam (often mistaken for smoke) until the moisture cooks off. I have an apple tree in the yard, it's a prized tree. Not so much for the apples but for the quality of the applewood for smoking purposes.
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