I picked up a Brinkman charcoal smoker (It is the small round smoker.) yesterday and tried it out this afternoon. Wife wants me to do a big B-B-Que on the 1st, so I thought I'd try it first. However, I do not want to cook with charcoal briquets. I want to cook on oak. So this is what I did.
I cut and chopped my oak into 2x2x4inch pieces and would place two or three into the coal pan as the coals burnt down. This produced a lot of smoke and kept the temp where I wanted it. I never thougt about what all that smoke was doing to the chicken I was experimenting with.
Five hours later, I removed the little round top and just had to laugh. The bird was black as smut. Fortunately, this had only collected on the skin. Once the skin was pulled off, the chicken was fantastic. It was moist and had a wonderful flavor.
Now for next time... I learned that what I really need is mostly heat and just a little smoke. So I'm thinking of having a fire going in a fire ring and just adding burning coals to the smoker as they are needed. This will do away with having the smoker "smoke like a freight train". I don't want the ham I try to come out black.
Maybe if I just sit the coal pan on the ground, and set the smoker over it, I could easily move it ever so often to add more coal. Anyone else have an easy way to make hot coals for the smoking while cutting down on the smoke residue?
I cut and chopped my oak into 2x2x4inch pieces and would place two or three into the coal pan as the coals burnt down. This produced a lot of smoke and kept the temp where I wanted it. I never thougt about what all that smoke was doing to the chicken I was experimenting with.
Five hours later, I removed the little round top and just had to laugh. The bird was black as smut. Fortunately, this had only collected on the skin. Once the skin was pulled off, the chicken was fantastic. It was moist and had a wonderful flavor.
Now for next time... I learned that what I really need is mostly heat and just a little smoke. So I'm thinking of having a fire going in a fire ring and just adding burning coals to the smoker as they are needed. This will do away with having the smoker "smoke like a freight train". I don't want the ham I try to come out black.
Maybe if I just sit the coal pan on the ground, and set the smoker over it, I could easily move it ever so often to add more coal. Anyone else have an easy way to make hot coals for the smoking while cutting down on the smoke residue?