smoking salmon

scott craven

Well-Known Member
Anybody got any wonderfuls recipes's ?
Dry or wet brine ?
the one we use is a wet brine of water,soy sauce,brownsugar
course salt,and pickling spice.
seems to work pretty good, just wonder what y'all use ?

scotty
 
I use pretty much the same ingredients. I like to add fresh ground coarse pepper and I paint on liberal amounts of real maple syrup with a basting brush in the final stages of the drying process (about the last hour of it being in the smoker.) Garlic Plus can be good too instead of the pepper. I love throwing different spices at my smoked fish and I've never had my experiments turn out inedible.

I think you could smoke and old hiking boot and it would taste good. <img src=icon_smile_wink.gif border=0 align=middle>
 
i used a dry brine of brownsuggar and salt...it turns into liquid though, everyone seems to love it i smoke it to a prettuy dry texture
 
I use sugar with enough salt like your seasoning to cook the fish, for my my smoking brines...on fish and some game meats.... just a sugar of some sort, honey, maple syrop, fruit jams, and even beets will cure fish enough to cold smoke, hot smoke or to just add a little smoke flavour to the fish before cooking.... sugar and a little salt brine is best will high fat fish ie salmon ...the sweetness balances the fattiness..but the main thing is that you don't end up with over salted fish....sugar will draw moisture out of the fish as salt will.....and I air the dry the fish in a large paper bag (Ilearned that from the chef at sooke harbour house)..some how the paper bag dries the fish out really well, but straight air drying works fine to....I have read to air dry for up to 4 hours.i usually dry for 2 hours

siwash
 
also...if you have a vaccum sealer that works great for brining too

siwash
 
Have always used Demarerra sugar has a sweeter more molasses type taste, leave skin on the fillet , slab the skin side down on a cedar shingle, coat with coarse salt and demarerra sugar press in after 1 hour, leave for 8- 10 hours(choice of time is yours for consistency and moisture) remove from shingle, wipe off and prepare for whatever smoke you like.
Final tid bit when I am almost finished the smoking process, prepare a glaze from same sugar as before with hot water(1/4 to a 1/3 cup water and 1 1/2 tablespoons of Demarerra sugar blend, cool, and then apply to the chunks with a brush, put back into smoker and set the glaze up over 1/2 hour, take out slam into the fridge quick to set up the final glaze texture and then get at it.
Mouth watering good !

AL
 
Here is a recipe that I have used many times in my Bradley smoker with great success. It disappears faster than bait in a mackeral year when I put it out. It was originally posted by an alaskan fisherman on the bradley board.

Step 1: PREPARE FISH
Filet salmon. Leave skin on. REMOVE ALL BONES (Very important for excellence!)

Step 2: UNIFORM STRIPS
Cut meat into uniform strips, 3/8 to 1/2” wide and 3-6” long, OR as long as your smoker racks can handle......the key here is to get uniform thickness cuts for uniform brining and smoking. The length is important only as far as your own packaging preferences. The strips will have a tendency to fall or sag through the larger grid racks.........I've switched to a small grid (1/2") teflon coated rack now have no problem with meat falling through

Step 3: BRINING
Soak in your own brine recipe for 12 hours at refrigerator temps (I use an Igloo type ice chest with about a gallon of ice thrown in). For more complete brining throughout, place a stainless steel or wooden grate over the top of the meat to hold it under the brine. Stir fish a few times during the brining process. The following brine recipe is included to get you started, but you are encouraged to experiment with your own salt/sugar, maple, honey, peppers, seasonings to develop your own. (My apologies to our metricated friends)
1 gallon cold water
1 quart teriyaki OR soy sauce
1 cup pickling salt
2 Lbs brown sugar
2 Tbsp garlic powder
3 Tbsp cayenne pepper
Step 4: GLAZING
Place fish in a single layer on drying racks and ensure that the pieces DON’T touch each other. Dry in a cool, shady place until a hard pellicle forms. Fish will have a tough, shiny coat and will be slightly tacky to the touch. (Winter time tip! Dry 12-36 hours in a cold place such as an unheated garage, but DON’T allow to freeze) In the summer temps, it can typically take 3-4 hours for the fish to “glaze”. A fan can help speed the drying process. DON’T let the fish spoil from warm temps! Turn the fish over 2-3 times during the Glazing process to ensure more complete glazing. It is during the glazing process that you can sprinkle on certain spices (e.g. cayenne pepper) and/or visual enhancers (e.g. parsley flakes).

Step 5: SMOKING
Smoke using the following Bradley Smoking guideline:
100°-120°F for 1-2 hours, then increase to
140° for 2-4 hours, then increase to
160° for 1-2 hours to finish

Use the longer times given for thicker/higher oil content fish. As a general rule, the higher temp you use or the longer you hot smoke, the more the meat cooks the oils out, HOWEVER, the meat becomes dryer/tougher in the process. I've "accidently" left meat (silver salmon) at the 140-150°F range for up to 8 hours and it still turned out great. I personally believe that you'd have to try REAL hard to make a batch of smoke salmon unpalatable by over smoking/cooking. If you get white “boogers” on the meat, you’re cooking too high/too fast.

EAT & ENJOY!!
 
Better yet glaze with maple syrup and some nice dark rum.

Mike

Catch it,Kill it,Smoke it.
 
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