Read-Only Read-Only Topic
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
-star Rating Rate It!  Login/Join 
Posted
I have had my Model 50 for a year and have mainly been using Hickory, Cherry and Apple woods with great success. My dad had an Oak fall on his property so now I have a bunch of oak drying. Any comments from the forum on smoking with oak? I have previously only used it to make coals for direct grilling. Thanks.
 
Posts: 62 | Location: northern california | Registered: August 20, 2004Report This Post
Posted Hide Post
Oak is great, I love hickory but I also like a lot of smoke, in seems to much hickory can get bitter. So I alway put some hickory, oak and maple in whewn I smoke. By mixing woods I can get more smoke and not have the bitter. A lot of people were I grew up in georgia only cook with oak. Just make sure its dry for the cs.
 
Posts: 32 | Location: Ohio | Registered: August 31, 2006Report This Post
Is this Heaven.... no... it's Iowa.
Posted Hide Post
I use both white and red oak in my 008 & 050 units. I prefer using them on beef and white is much milder than red. First couple smokes using red oak start, with small amounts and increase till you like it. Red oak can be a bit overpowering like mesquite. IMHO...

bob


Never wrestle a pig... you just get dirty and the pig has fun!
 
Posts: 667 | Location: Iowa | Registered: April 04, 2004Report This Post
Posted Hide Post
Sonny's Real Pit Bar-B-Que (a chain in the southeast) only uses red oak. Like the other posts say, make sure it is dry and work your way up in quanity. I like to mix my wood. If a wood like hickory has a bite to it, I like to balance it with apple or cherry.


Papa Pig, "Friends don't let friends eat bad Que."
 
Posts: 144 | Location: Kaiserslautern, Germany | Registered: February 05, 2005Report This Post
Smmmmoooookin'!
Posted Hide Post
Oak, pecan, hickory and cherry are staples for me smokes.


Wheelz -
Life, Liberty & the Pursuit of Good Q Cool
 
Posts: 1819 | Location: Searcy, Arkansas - Gateway to the Ozarks! | Registered: August 11, 2003Report This Post
GLH
PUREBRED HICK








Posted Hide Post
I use alot of white oak in the smokette. I only use redoak when cooking over an open wood fire, same with mesquite. I don't like the harsh bitter whang.


WHOOO PIGS SOOOEEEEEE !!!



 
Posts: 2900 | Location: Ozark foothills, Arkansas | Registered: September 05, 2003Report This Post
Posted Hide Post
There is a difference between white and red oak smoke. Give it a try you will probably have a life time supply. As cadillac says the white is more mellow, so it depends what you are cooking and what you are trying to achieve.


Jerry
BBQ how strangers become lifelong friends
 
Posts: 235 | Location: NE Washington | Registered: January 29, 2005Report This Post
Tom
Posted Hide Post
Just a couple add ons to the above.

Because oak is somewhat neutral/mellow it is often used with flavor woods.

Because traditional Cookshacks use small amounts of wood and burn very efficiently,sometimes cooks want more flavor in certain products.

For this reason,some folks will burn pure flavor woods in Cookshacks.

Sometimes, pure stickburners burn oak down to coals,to avoid oversmoking.

A popular blend for many cooks is 30% flavor woods/70% oak.

Being the "queen" of woods,it is often thought to have a mellowing effect.

As said above,try it and see.

Just a couple of thoughts.


Good Q 2 Ya,Tom.
 
Posts: 6773 | Location: Satellite Beach,fl,usa | Registered: March 02, 2001Report This Post
Posted Hide Post
I have been mixing Oak Jack Daniels wiskey barrel chunks with apple and love the combo.


Rich
 
Posts: 52 | Registered: September 02, 2002Report This Post
 Previous Topic | Next Topic powered by eve community  

Read-Only Read-Only Topic


Copyright Cookshack, Inc. 2001 - 2007