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Thanks to Cabela's building a new store in Anchorage, Alaska I was able to get my C/S SM 025 shipped free in-store pick-up. I had to order my cold-smoke baffle direct from manufacturer since Cabela's doesn't stock it yet. I wanted to produce Russian River sockeye salmon strips with the consistency of Tustumena Smokehouse [$28 per pound!] near Kasilof, Alaska so began the experiment. To keep things simple I've been using Hi Mountain's Gourmet Fish Brine and soak strips in refrigerator overnight. I use cottonwood like the natives and opted to season the wood from last fall trough winter. Since cold smoking involves such low temperature, I use a scout ax to shave chips which smoke nicely starting around 50 degrees. That's right folks, morning temps here in Alaska are low-mid 40's this time of year. Based on ambient temperature and humidity I've found somewhere in the neighborhood of 38 hours produces the consistency I'm looking for. You'll know it's right when it's not too dried out and pieces stick down in your teeth and you need to use floss to get them out. I have some nice pictures but can;'t seem to get them compressed with the new Window's 8 though I've selected compress under advanced settings. Hopefully this post might help some folks who have a similar addiction native-style strips too. Enjoy!
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Well great news on that. Cant imagine a better place for Cabelas than Alaska. Should be a match made in Heaven. Cottonwood huh? Never would have thunk of that. Folks around here mostly refuse to stoop low enough to burn it in the fireplace. Gonna remember that one. Had an old chum many moons ago on the Coast around Corpus. He smoked a trash fish called "Golden Croakers" came out tasting like heavy smoked country ham. Never would have guessed it was fish lol. Bet salmon would be excellent. Know he used a brine and think he used small skinned fish. Not sure where the bones went but the country ham did not have any detectable bones. Kindly keep us posted on your endeavors up there.
Looks like we have 4 Cookshack smokers coming in on the next truck at Cabela's. I've asked management to see if they can also stock the cold-smoke baffle.
Seems 38 hours has been the "normal" target time frame to get my "native style" strips to the consistency I like. Recent rains and increase humidity have forced me to go as long as 52 hours!

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