Friday, September 25, 2009

Build A Fish Smoker

Smoking fish or meat can be as elaborate or as simple a process as you wish. The Caribbean inventors of barbecue would simply hang meat over the fire on sticks. In stark contrast, many restaurants spend thousands of dollars and countless hours on smokehouses. The smoker outlined below is somewhere in the middle. Made out of an aluminum trash can, it may not look pretty. However, it will give you succulent smoked fish and meat that can stand up to the best.


Instructions


1. Drill a hole near the bottom of your trash can to run the hot-plate cord through. This need only be large enough to accommodate the hot plate's power cord. File down the edges of the hole so that the sharp aluminum will not pierce the electrical cord.


2. Place the hot plate in the center of the trash can's bottom. Since the idea is to heat the wood chips, rather than the metal skin of the trash can, make sure the hot plate is centered. Its filament should not touch the edges of the trash can. Run the cord out of the pre-cut hole.


3. Set your charcoal box on top of the hot plate. Nothing needs to separate the hot plate from the charcoal box, since the box is designed for even higher temperatures than will be pursued here.








4. Fill the charcoal box with wood chips that have been soaked in water for three to four hours. Hickory chips can be purchased at any grocery store, although you may want to try different types of wood to produce different flavors. Soaking the chips in water will allow them to last longer in your smoker.


5. Place your round grill inside the rim of the trash can. It should sink a few inches below the rim of the trash can before catching. The grill should be large enough that the narrowing trash can diameter holds it more than 2 feet over the hot plate.


6. Drill a hole in the trash can's lid for a thermometer. A standard meat-probe thermometer will work perfectly, since the probe can be lowered into the trash can, leaving the reader sticking out of the lid's top. Optimal temperature for smoking is between 210 and 230 degrees.


7. Add your fish or meat and plug in the thermometer. Meat should be cooked to an internal temperature of 140-150 degrees. This process typically takes four hours of slow smoking. Keep the lid on tight to preserve the all-important smoke.

Tags: fish meat, Drill hole, four hours, large enough, wood chips