smoking meat

jjenness

Very Active Member
Sep 30, 2011
666
62
Lewistown, MT
I just put the wood in a tin foil pouch and poke some holes in the foil, and only use two pouches usually. Each pouch holds maybe 1 cup of wood chips.
 

tdub24

Veteran member
Dec 15, 2011
1,331
559
Carlin, NV
I like having the smoke going majority of the time. If it is thick throughout the first couple of hours, I will let it taper of and end up cooking without smoke.

I was gifted that Amazing smoker tube, but have yet to use it. I just smoked some pepperoni sticks and used pellets for the first time in my little box placed on the electric burner. Burned really consistently throughout the whole smoking cycle. Pellets much better than chips in my experience.
 

Tim McCoy

Veteran member
Dec 15, 2014
1,855
4
Oregon
I used to run smoke almost all the time. Went to a new electric Masterbuilt unit 4 years or so ago, so now just use 2-4 loads of chips. Seems to turn out about the same to me, so now my chips last longer. The old unit, if it was cold, I needed the chips to keep the heat up, new unit, just dial in the temp and off it goes. I've done sausage in it without chips, and the residual smoke in it gave the summer sausage just enough. That smoke canister looks like it would work well.
 

Work2hunt

Veteran member
Mar 2, 2013
1,366
11
St. Louis, MO
I have found that every smoker is different. I typically only smoke for about 3 hrs. Some smokers burn a little quicker and some slower. You will probably have to experiment a little.
 

Eberle

Veteran member
Oct 2, 2012
1,009
13
50
Sasakwa, Oklahoma
I leave the wood in and smoke the whole time. Typically your meat will only take in the smoke for the first couple of hours then repel it.
 

Musket Man

Veteran member
Jul 20, 2011
6,457
0
colfax, wa
I run a 1/2 hour of so without smoke to dry the meat off, then I smoke the whole time. I would get a thermometer with remote probes so you can put them in and check temp without having to open it. I have 2 probes and put 1 in bottom rack and 1 in 3rd rack. I have never had anything I thought was too smokey but that is personal preferance too and you will have to expierment to get what you like. The most important thing is getting your sausage to the proper internal temp.
 

libidilatimmy

Veteran member
Oct 22, 2013
1,140
3
Wyoming
I smoke any sausage I make for about 3 hours, after that the meat has sealed off from the outside and the smoke won't penetrate the meat any more and you're wasting wood. (cooking at 200 degrees)
 

Fink

Veteran member
Apr 7, 2011
1,961
204
West Side, MoMo
I've not smoked sausages, so I can't comment there.. But, I usually try to smoke with a very mild wood when I'm doing jerky. My preference is white oak. I'll also use apple wood. I'd steer clear of hickory or mesquite, as it's a much harsher wood, and probably better suited to pork butts, briskets and the like. If you opt to finish in the oven, keep a very close eye on it, or you'll end up with crunchy chips.