Better Homes and Gardens New Grilling Book: Charcoal, Gas, Smokers, Indoor Grills, Turkey Fryers, Rotisseries (Better Homes & Gardens Cooking) (Plastic Comb)
Jul/0910
Amazon.com ReviewBetter Homes and Gardens’s The New Grilling Book opens with an introduction offering good advice on grill types, fuel types, safety, and maintenance basics. The several hundred recipes include condiments, appetizers, main dishes, and desserts–all prepared right on the grill. Each recipe has specific directions for charcoal and gas grills, along with a chapter on smoke cooking. You’ll find the usual suspects, with recipes for ribs, steaks, and vegetables, but there’s (more…)
Weber Style 6435 Professional Grade Grill Pan
Jul/096
Just the right tool for cooking pan fries on the grill. Or try it for delicate fish, vegetables, and even fruit. Made of 430-grade stainless steel.
Outset QS77 Stainless Steel Wood Chip Smoker Box
Jul/094
Exclusive grillware accents from Outset like this 8.75-in. stainless steel BBQ Wood Chip Smoking Box will infuse all of your barbecue experiences with smoking quality! Take advantage of the wonderful flavors of different wood varieties like mesquite and hickory when you’re at a barbecue with this well-made wood chip smoking box. To clean, just handwash with mild dish soap and dry immediately.
Old Smokey Electric Smoker Replacement Wood Chips & Grease Absorbents
Jul/090
The Old Smokey Wood Chips are a ½ pound bag, along with 1 package of replacement Grease Absorbents. The wood chips and Grease Absorbents should be replaced in your smoker after about 6 uses.
Charcoal Companion CC4044 Porcelain Wood Chips Smoker Box
Jul/090
The reusable, enamel coated Wood Chips Smoker Box from Charcoal Companion is an essential for gas grills and can be used on electric or charcoal grills. Simply add wood chips and place on grill. 9-inch by 3-3/4-inch by 1.5-inch.
Cameron Cookware Barbeque Smoke Box
Jul/091
Stainless steel reusable smoke box. Soak wood chips, fill BBQ Smoke Box, place box in your grill on rock or flavor bars. When the smoke appears start the cooking process. Smoke will last approximately 15 – 20 minutes and will enhance the flavor of your favorite dish. Reusable.
Weber 7573 Premium Cover, Fits Weber Spirit Gas Grills
Jul/098
Weber, Black, Heavy Duty Premium Cover, 1 Size Now Fits All Spirit Series Grills, Genesis Silver A & B Grills & Weber Genesis 1000 Gas Grills.
Volcano Portable Cook Stove – Bar-b-que Grill – Lightweight Outdoor Camp Cooker. Runs on Charcoal, Wood, Propane Gas. Perfect for Camping, Hunting, Hiking, Dutch Oven Cooking, Barbeque Grilling, Emergency Prepardness, Supplies, Rv & Tail Gate Parties. Perfect Gift.
Jul/090
The Volcano is great for Camping, Boating, Tailgate Parties, Back Yard, Hunting, At The Beach, Family Reunions, Picnic and just to warm yourself. Comes fully assembled and ready to cook. Propane attachment sold seperately. Double wall steel construction frame that minimizes heat transfer to the outer body and to the bottom of the stove, allowing use on any surface. Convenient portability and storage. ” I’ve been cooking on Volcano Cook Stoves since 1992. There is know other stove o (more…)
Gas Grills Smokers for Smoking Fish
Jul/090

Smoked Salmon
You can use gas grills smokers, a built in grill with a smoker attachment, or gas grills with a built in smoker to make some tasty smoked salmon or other smoked fish. It takes time and effort, but the tasty and healthy results are well worth it.
In this world of prepackaged and chemical laden frankenfood, it would be refreshing to travel back to a different age when small native communities would smoke their meats over a smoky fire or in a smoke filled teepee so that it could be preserved to tide them over during winter. This is primal stuff. Most civilizations through history had some for of smoking as a food preservation before chemicals and refigeration were invented. I won’t argue against refigeration, but chemicals in food, I believe, can lead to sickness or nutritional deficiencies. While food smoking does create some natural chemicals that you would not want to consume exclusively or every day, in moderation it is fine, as is evidenced by the fact that people have been doing it for millenia without any noticable chronic or terminal effect.
Let’s smoke some fish.
Fresh fish is the best, and you can eat salt water fish like salmon and tuna raw. Sushi anyone? If you eat fish raw, it must be oh so fresh. Besides fresh raw, or cooking it, you can freeze it to save it for later. You can can it as well. Smoking is yet another method of preserving fish. I adore chilled vacuum sealed smoked salmon from the grocery store, and I have previously enoyed canned smoked sprats from Latvia, which were very interesting and delicious on black or brown bread.
You want to be safe from bacteria and parasites, so I suggest soaking the fish in a brine (salt) solution first. You can use electric, charcoal, wood, or gas grills smokers for the task.
Get your fish. Gut them and take the head off. Cut them into fillets and chunks. Leave the skin on. Put the skin side down onto the grates so if they stick you lose the skin and no big deal. If you were to try this with fish steaks the meat would stick to the grates and falls apart. You would be left with a mess and a lot of frustration, and wasted fish.
Soak the fish in a brine solution of spices, sugar, and salt. You can use a preservative but I say that you don’t need chemicals. Use your own judgement.
Prepare the fish with this basic brine solution:
1/2 cup non-iodized (Kosher works fine) salt
1/2 cup sugar
1 quart water
Stir until salt and sugar are completely dissolved
Place fish into the solution, taking care to insure that the fish is completely submerged in the brine and place it in the refrigerator.
Thick 1 inch plus chunks should be in brine from 8 to 12 hours.
Thin 1 inch or less should be in from 6 to 8 hours.
Remove your fish from the brine and rinse each piece under cold water.
Being gentle, pat dry and lay the pieces on some paper towel to air dry for at least one hour. After one hour you should notice that the fish has a kind of glazed surface film, or “pellicle”. This is normal. This “skin” serves as a surface for the smoke to adhere to during the smoking process. After an hour of drying the fish should be a bit sticky to the touch, and this means that it is ready for the smoking process.
Woods such as Mesquite, Hickory, and Apple are good. Adler is another acceptable wood. Don’t use pine as it is not good and you will get a nasty taste to your food. When using fruit woods, you can also add some pieces of the actual fruit to the wood for added flavor. You will have to refill the wood holder several times during the entire smoking process.
In your gas grills smoker or other type of smoker, place the fish chunks skins down as mentioned earlier, and they should not be touching each other. Use large enough pieces so that you maximize space. This is so because since you need some space between pieces, smaller but more numerous pieces would mean not enough space for all your fish. Larger pieces spaced apart so they don’t touch actually means that you can fit more fish on the cooking grate. See, you are already benefiting from my experience! Here’s another tip. If you have a multi level grate system in your smoker, you will want to switch the top and bottom grates through the process since the bottom ones get more heat and smoke.
Twelve hours in the smoker will result in a moist smoked salmon. Twenty four hours will result in a salmon jerky, which is a nice jerky but hard to get any bones out if you encounter any. It’s actually good to try to pull out as many bones as you can when you start, but there can always be some small spiny ones inside the meat that you cannot see. Do your best is all I can tell you to do. I used pliers to pull the visibly protruding bones from the raw fish. Pull slowly, firmly, and straight out. For the twelve hour moist version of smoked salmon, any residual bones are easily dealt with during the eating phase. For the twenty four hour jerky version, it is best to just separate the meat while it is still soft straight from the smoker. You can use it in sauces and gravy but not in soups. Some people use the leftover skin and bones as a cat food. Your mileage may vary there.
While the salmon is cooling on the grates after the smoking is completed, you can add additional spices like garlic and black pepper, or hot pepper like cayenne if that is your thing. The greasy white stuff is salmon oil, which is basically Omega 3 fatty acids and is very healthy for you. That stuff helps to unclog your arteries and it also soaks up spices very well. I tell you that because many people would think that it was “yucky” when in fact nothing could be further from the truth.
Storage is a breeze if you have a vacuum sealing machine. I mean the type of machine that attaches to a plastic bag which contains the salmon, and it sucks out the air and heat seals the bag once the air is gone. No air means that the food won’t spoil as fast. You should still have it refrigerated, however. Freezing won’t harm it, but the texture can be affected.
Since the entire process can take the better part of two days, you want to work with batches of at least 6 pounds – larger batches – to make it worthwhile and cost effective. Non vacuum sealed but plastic bagged smoked fish can go for about a month, while the vacuum sealed fish can last for several months or longer.
I could have put this in the beginning, but a word about wild caught vs farmed salmon. Now I know that ay salmon or fish farmer reading this will not like it, but farmed fish is full of fake foods and antibiotics, if not hormones. You don’t want that. Most of the time they get the salmon flesh orangey pink by adding dye to the food mix. In the wild, salmon flesh is white if they eat fish like sardines, and the pink color actually comes from them eating krill and shrimp. The color of wild salmon is a pale pink color, not orange. Also, the fatty acid profile of the fish is TOTALLY different between farmed and wild. The fake and processed fish feed cannot match the stuff that the wild fish eat, and their fats are full of healthy Omega 3 fats like DHA and EPA. As a matter of fact, farmed fish are the opposite, usually full of dangerous pro inflammatory Omega 6 fats. That is why I will not eat Tilapia. It is cheap, but it is also farmed and full of Omega 6 fats, which can exacerbate inflammatory conditions like arthritis and artery disease. You don’t want that the cheaper price is NOT worth it. Go wild. If your fish monger says otherwise, get another fish monger because he is full of something stinky, and I don’t mean rotten fish.
So there you have it. I hope that this information on how to make smoked salmon is useful and encourages you to be a bit adventurous, or possibly go get that gas grills smokers or other smoker appliance that you may need to do this.
Brinkmann 810-5304-4 Smoke’N Grill Electric Smoker and Grill, Stainless Steel
Jul/090
Amazon.com
Enjoy slow-cooked barbecue and authentic smokehouse flavor with this electric smoker and grill. Perfect for large gatherings, it comes equipped with two chrome-plated steel cooking grills that can hold up to 50 pounds of food. Cook a ham on one level and a chicken on the other. Both the top and bottom grill levels cook at about the same temperature, so when cooking different types or cuts of meat at the same time, place the meat that cooks the fastest on the top grill fo (more…)








