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I am not smoking okie but I would recommend using a briquet or 2 of charcoal. It does not add flavor but does add a smoke ring and pinkness to the food. Start with meat cold like 39degrees and cook meat below 200 for first couple hours. The meat does not take on much smoke after it reaches 145 degree. The only other thing I would recommend for more flavor is letting rubs absorb in over 24 hours. I put my meat in trash bag and tie air tight and let it sit over night. It has really imporved my rubs flavor. These are the things I do to get more flavor and smoke.
It's "okie" Smiler

Yes, you have too much moisture. The key would be to open the door and let some out. You have to get the humidity down. Try some experiments, say once an hour open the door for a min or two. Really depends on how much you have loaded inside (8 briskets vs 1 will generate different humidity)

Not sure about your "flavor" comment.

Flavor is a blend of a lot of things.

Are you wanting more smoke flavor?
Is your rub not holding up to the humidity?

Flavor is a factor of a lot of things.
Hope it helps.

If not, let me know any specific issues and we'll work it.

FYI, I always reseason my food towards the end of the smoke and I think most rub just don't hold up while cooking, they ALL lose flavor.

I'll also reseason the meat after pulling sometimes if it needs it.
Hi Tom,

I am talking internal. Right now when I slice the ribs, they are very gray. That may be the result of too much moisture, which I will try the techniques discussed here to resolve, but, if you have any advice on how to maintain a nice redish appearance with a good smoked flavor, I am open to suggestions.
Well,you have a couple possibles above.

A third could be a rub with more bright red paprika,and more sugar.

Yes,it is external application,but will give the slabs a better overall appearance,and semblance of bark,on the cut surface.

If it was critical, even after these approaches,you could always experiment with adding a small percentage of TQ to your rubs and let them set a couple hours,before going on the cooker.

I'd think these approaches should do all you could want about color.

I'd think smoke flavor could be handled by experimenting with increased hickory at the start and another small burst,when setting the sauce on the slabs.

If not,give us a shout.
Last edited by tom

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