Darren72 wrote:Hot-smoked salmon is one of those dishes that I love and don't make nearly enough. My wife and I remedied this last week. I started with a 3 lb piece of Scottish-farm-raised Atlantic Salmon that I bought at Dirk's. We made a cure using a cup of salt, half-cup of white sugar, half-cup of brown sugar, the tops and frawns from a fennel bulb, a couple of tablespoons of pastis, black pepper, and some fennel seeds. Rubbed this all over the salmon, put it on a dish, covered it with plastic wrap, and then weighted the whole thing down. In the fridge for 12 hours or so, then turned the salmon over, 12 more hours, turned it over, 12 more hours, and then removed it. Rinsed off the cured and dried it with a paper towel. Then we laid it in front of a fan for about 2 hours, which dried it out and created a nice pellicle. At this point we have our version of Gravlax.
The next step was to smoke it on a Weber kettle grill with apple wood. I didn't measure the temperature in the grill, but I suspect it was around 300, perhaps higher. We smoked for about 30-45 minutes. The internal temperature was in the range of 120-130, if I recall. The meat was still incredibly moist. The final dish was smokey, a little salty (especially on the edges), and really rich - in a good way, if you like salmon.
I think you are mixing up or combining two different techniques.
Usually for 'hot smoking', one brines for a day or so, a side of salmon. lets dry and then hot smokes.
The strength of the brine and brining time determine the saltiness of the final prep. We always err on the light side of salty.
For gravlax, lox or whatever you want to call the final product, the cure is rubbed with whatever flavoring ingredients you want onto the flesh of the fish and cured, being somewhat absorbed into the flesh during curing. A cold smoking can be used to finish the product but never a hot smoking.-Dick