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I soaked some hickory chips for 30 minutes.
Put the smoker box on the back burner of my gas grill, and cranked everything to high. Still no smoke after 30 minutes, and it's over 600 degrees in there. |
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Mitch@... wrote:
I soaked some hickory chips for 30 minutes. Put the smoker box on the back burner of my gas grill, and cranked everything to high. Still no smoke after 30 minutes, and it's over 600 degrees in there. Is this a new grill? Have you gotten smoke before? Could you have mistaken the ash collector for the smoker box? |
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Is this a new grill? Have you gotten smoke before? Could you have mistaken the ash collector for the smoker box? No, not a new grill. I didn't have any luck with the Jack Daniels chips either, so I bought plain hickory chips. I also bought a cast iron smoker box. When I'm done, I'm left with charred remnants, but there's no smoke during grilling, and there's no smoke flavor. |
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said...
Is this a new grill? Have you gotten smoke before? Could you have mistaken the ash collector for the smoker box? No, not a new grill. I didn't have any luck with the Jack Daniels chips either, so I bought plain hickory chips. I also bought a cast iron smoker box. When I'm done, I'm left with charred remnants, but there's no smoke during grilling, and there's no smoke flavor. Try NOT soaking them? Andy |
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On Aug 29, 2:16 pm, Mitch@... wrote:
I soaked some hickory chips for 30 minutes. Put the smoker box on the back burner of my gas grill, and cranked everything to high. Still no smoke after 30 minutes, and it's over 600 degrees in there. Don't know what the smoker box or the chips might be like for you so can't identify the problem. I wrap soaked wood chips in foil, poke holes in the top of the foil packet and put it right on the (fake) coals. Smokes a lot. -aem |
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On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 21:16:36 GMT, Mitch@... wrote:
I soaked some hickory chips for 30 minutes. Put the smoker box on the back burner of my gas grill, and cranked everything to high. Still no smoke after 30 minutes, and it's over 600 degrees in there. The problem may be "cranked everything to high" and 600 degrees. It sounds like the chips are going straight to ash without having a chance to smoke. Not that I do it, but my understanding is that smoking is a low temperature process. - Mark |
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Andy wrote:
said... Is this a new grill? Have you gotten smoke before? Could you have mistaken the ash collector for the smoker box? No, not a new grill. I didn't have any luck with the Jack Daniels chips either, so I bought plain hickory chips. I also bought a cast iron smoker box. When I'm done, I'm left with charred remnants, but there's no smoke during grilling, and there's no smoke flavor. Try NOT soaking them? Andy Soaking them is correct. Try lowering the temperature. You said you have it up to 600 degrees in there, no? That's too high. You're incinerating your wood rather than prompting it to smolder -- smoldering produces smoke without flame. |
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Mitch@... wrote:
I soaked some hickory chips for 30 minutes. Put the smoker box on the back burner of my gas grill, and cranked everything to high. Still no smoke after 30 minutes, and it's over 600 degrees in there. There's your problem. You're incinerating, not smoking. Smoking is done at low temperatures, long and slow. 600 degrees is ridiculous! Jill |
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jmcquown wrote:
There's your problem. You're incinerating, not smoking. Smoking is done at low temperatures, long and slow. 600 degrees is ridiculous! Smoking is done at a low temperature as measured at the food item being targeted for smoking, but the firebox temperature can be much higher. I routinely add wood to a red-hot charcoal fire, and it produces plenty of wood smoke which then cools off as it travels to the food target. Charcoal fires are non-smoky because the smoke components have been already burned from the wood. It is not because they are too hot. Steve |
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There's your problem. You're incinerating, not smoking. Smoking is done at low temperatures, long and slow. 600 degrees is ridiculous! Thanks. I'll keep trying. The recipe was from Cook's Illustrated. Put the wood on the back burner, turn everything to high for 20 minutes until it smokes heavily (which it never did), then turn off the front 2 burners and put the food on, maintaining the grill temp at 275. |
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Mitch@... wrote:
There's your problem. You're incinerating, not smoking. Smoking is done at low temperatures, long and slow. 600 degrees is ridiculous! Thanks. I'll keep trying. The recipe was from Cook's Illustrated. Put the wood on the back burner, turn everything to high for 20 minutes until it smokes heavily (which it never did), then turn off the front 2 burners and put the food on, maintaining the grill temp at 275. The only smoking I've done (shut up, Sheldon!) was over lump coal. Sounds like you're using a propane grill. There are no "burners" on the grills I've used. Good luck! Jill |
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Mitch@... wrote:
There's your problem. You're incinerating, not smoking. Smoking is done at low temperatures, long and slow. 600 degrees is ridiculous! Thanks. I'll keep trying. The recipe was from Cook's Illustrated. Put the wood on the back burner, turn everything to high for 20 minutes until it smokes heavily (which it never did), then turn off the front 2 burners and put the food on, maintaining the grill temp at 275. That assumes that you have front and back burners. My propane grill has three burners, left, right and middle. I put the smoker box over on of the burners, crank it up to get the smoke going and then reduce the heat. |