Hi,
I don't smoke as much as jimswside or G Wiv, I probably haven't smoked anything since November. Today, I made smoked salmon for a luncheon with friends.
I haven't looked at my smoker in months, so it was full of little surprises. The little safety door on my smoker doesn't fit very well. It is not unusual to find some water sitting in the bowl. Today, the water level covered the charcoal grate. It is below freezing, it isn't water in the liquid state. It is solid as ice with the charcoal grate nicely integrated.
If I had looked yesterday, I might have taken the bottom inside to defrost. I don't have this time available, so I flip my bottom bowl upside down hoping it will slide out. No luck. I kept picking it up and dropping from increasing heights until it finally popped out.
I still needed a charcoal grate for the air flow. I winced, then gave up my bottom grate to hold the charcoal. It meant I needed to scrunch those two salmon filets on the top grate instead of using both grates as originally planned.
I didn't plan to use my waterpan, which is just as well because I didn't clean since the last used. Frozen dirty water with a layer of grease, which I put aside to deal with later. I took my other waterpan already filled with sand, laid a fresh layer of foil and put it aside.
Fortunately, I did clean the top grate after the last use, which means I scrapped it down when it was still hot.
Charcoal took longer than usual to ignite in the chimney. I got impatient, kept blowing into it and even burned additional paper in the bottom. I probably should have gone inside rather than watch it heat up. Time would have passed more quickly occupied reading the newspaper. I dumped the coals prematurely into the charcoal ring. I was just impatient today, which meant the charcoal took longer to light at both locations.
Part of my impatience was borne in fatigue. Gary warned not to rub the salmon any earlier than 3-4 hours, otherwise it has a gravlax quality. I had an 11 am finish target, which meant rubbing the salmon at 4 am. I prepared the rub before going to bed, because I couldn't imagine doing an adequate job half awake. When the alarm went off at 4 am, couldn't initially remember why I needed to awake at such an hour. I almost rolled over and went back to sleep. Fortunately, I remembered and did the deed. Upon returning to bed, I couldn't fall asleep until 5 am or so.
Awakening at 7:30 am was not very easy. I did rinse the salmon of the rub and let it dry for an hour. I thought if I started the smoker around 8:30 am or so, I would have the fish smoking by 9 am. Ha! Those complications from winter (and my neglect) ate into this time. The salmon rubbed in olive oil didn't begin smoking until 9:30 am.
Hoping to maintain my target of an 11 am finish, I never opened the smoker once. I went inside to make a compound butter, which was suggested as a baste for the salmon. I couldn't sacrifice the time opening the smoker any earlier than 11 am, because it takes it 15 minutes to recover temperature on a warmer day.
At 11 am, I opened the smoker to find both filets perfectly cooked. I lifted them onto serving trays and massaged in the basting, now finishing, butter.
At the luncheon, my reputation, as well as Gary's, were preserved.
Now that my smoker is cleaned, I might just smoke some more this week.
Regards,