Smoking (cooking)
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Smoking is a way to add flavor, brown, cook, or preserve food. It works by letting food meet smoke from burning or smoldering material, usually wood. This method is often used for meat, fish, and even tea. The smoke gives these foods a special taste and can help keep them fresh longer.
In Europe, alder wood is traditionally used for smoking, but oak is now more common. In North America, many different woods are used, such as hickory, mesquite, oak, pecan, alder, maple, and even woods from fruit trees like apple, cherry, and plum. Sometimes, other materials besides wood are burned to add flavor to the food.
There are different ways to smoke food, like cold smoking, warm smoking, and hot smoking. These methods mainly affect the surface of the food and don’t preserve it on their own. To keep food fresh longer, smoking is often combined with other steps, like chilling and packaging. People can also add a smoky flavor to food using liquid smoke. Historically, farms in the West had special buildings called smokehouses where meats were smoked and stored safely away from other buildings.
History
The smoking of food probably began in ancient times. People used to smoke food along with salting it, which helped keep the food from spoiling. Many cultures used this method for a long time.
When transportation improved, it became easier to move food around, so people didn’t need to smoke food as much to keep it safe. Instead, smoking became a way to add flavor to the food. In 1939, a new device called the Torry Kiln was created in Scotland, which made smoking food on a large scale much easier. Even with new technology, the basic way of smoking food has stayed the same for many years.
Types by method of application
A "Little Chief" home smoker and racks with hot smoked Pacific salmon
Cold smoking
Cold smoking is different from hot smoking because it does not cook the food. After cold smoking, the food is still raw. The temperature for cold smoking is usually between 20 and 30 °C (68 and 86 °F). At these temperatures, food gets a smoky flavor but stays moist. Meats should be fully cured before cold smoking. Cold smoking can add flavor to foods like cheese, nuts, chicken breasts, beef, pork chops, salmon, scallops, and steak. The food is often hung in a dry place first to form a thin layer before being cold smoked for several days. Some cold smoked foods are then baked, grilled, steamed, roasted, or sautéed before eating.
Warm smoking
Warm smoking uses temperatures between 25 and 40 °C (77 and 104 °F) to add smoke flavor to foods.
Hot smoking
Hot smoking cooks food while adding smoke flavor, usually in a special oven or smokehouse. The temperature and amount of smoke need careful control. Some smokers have their own heat source, while others use heat from a stove or oven. Like cold smoking, the food may be hung first to form a thin layer before smoking for 1 to 24 hours. Foods hot smoked at temperatures between 52 and 80 °C (126 and 176 °F) are usually fully cooked and safe to eat without more cooking. At higher temperatures, above 85 °C (185 °F), food can shrink or split.
Liquid smoke
Liquid smoke is made from smoke mixed with water and is used by spraying or dipping food.
Smoke roasting
Smoke-roasting combines roasting and smoking. It can be done in a special smoker, a closed wood-fired oven, or a barbecue pit. In North America, this method is often called "barbecuing," "pit baking," or "pit roasting."
Types of fuel
Wood smoke
Hardwoods are made of three main parts: cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. Cellulose and hemicellulose are the building blocks of wood cells. Lignin acts like glue that holds the cells together. Some softwoods, like pines and firs, contain resin. This resin can give a harsh taste when burned and is not usually used for smoking.
When burned, cellulose and hemicellulose turn into sugar molecules. These create sweet, flowery, and fruity smells. Lignin burns to make smoky, spicy, and strong smells, including vanilla-scented and clove-like aromas. These smells add smoky flavor to food. Wood also has small amounts of proteins that add roasted flavors to food.
Different types of wood give food different flavors. The temperature at which the wood burns is also important. Burning wood at very high temperatures breaks down the flavor molecules. This creates less pleasant smells. The best flavor comes from burning wood at low, smoldering temperatures between 300 and 400 °C (570 and 750 °F).
Types of smokers
The offset smoker has a big cooking chamber with a small firebox at the bottom. A small fire burns in the firebox, and the heat and smoke go into the cooking chamber to flavor and cook the meat.
A reverse flow offset smoker changes how the smoke moves, helping to cook more evenly. The upright drum smoker is made from a steel drum and uses charcoal and wood for smoking. The vertical water smoker has a bowl of water to keep the temperature steady and add flavor. Propane smokers use gas burners to heat wood or charcoal to make smoke. Traditional smoke boxes have separate places for the fire and the food. Electric smokers use heating elements to keep the temperature right but give less flavor. In the trench method, a fire burns in a trench to smoke food placed in a chimney above it. Commercial smokehouses use special systems to control temperature and humidity. Pellet smokers burn wood pellets to make steady, controlled smoke for cooking.
Preservation
Smoke helps keep food safe by stopping some germs and protecting it from spoiling. However, smoke does not go deep into meat or fish. To really keep food for a long time, smoking is usually done together with adding salt or letting the food dry out.
Smoking is great for fish with a lot of oil. It stops the fat on the surface from going bad and keeps the oxygen away from the fat inside. Some fish that is smoked a lot and salted well can stay good without refrigeration for many weeks or even months.
Artificial smoke flavoring, like liquid smoke, can be bought to give food a smoky taste, but these products do not help keep food fresh.
Competitive smoking
Competitive BBQ smoking is becoming more popular, especially in the southern United States. People who enjoy BBQ come together on weekends to cook different kinds of meat, like a whole hog or beef brisket.
Groups such as the Kansas City Barbeque Society organize contests all across America.
Health concerns
See also: Smoked meat § Health concerns
Eating smoked meats and fish can sometimes increase the chance of getting some kinds of cancer. It's helpful to know this before you enjoy these foods.
List of smoked foods and beverages
Some common foods and drinks are smoked to add flavor. These include:
Beverages
- Lapsang souchong tea leaves are smoked and dried over pine or cedar fires
- Malt beverages, such as the malt used to make whisky, Rauchbier, and Grodziskie
- Maté, where traditional yerba mate leaves are smoked
Meat, fish, and cheese
- Beef, like pastrami
- Pork, such as bacon and ham
- Turkey and chicken
- Sausage, including salami
- Jerky
- Fish like eel, traditional Grimsby smoked fish, haddock, Arbroath smokies, kippers, and bloater, salmon, mackerel, and bivalves such as oysters and mussels
- Egg and fish eggs
- Cheese such as Adyghe Qwaye (Circassian), Gouda, Gruyère, and Oscypek
Other items that can be smoked include nuts, tofu, paprika, and salt.
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