Smoking (cooking)

Smoking is the process of flavoring, browning, cooking, or preserving food by exposing it to smoke from burning or smoldering material, most often wood. Meat, fish, and lapsang souchong tea are often smoked.

Meat hanging inside a smokehouse in Switzerland
A Montreal smoked meat sandwich, a well-known Canadian dish

Hot-smoked chum salmon

In Europe, alder is the traditional smoking wood, but oak is more often used now, and beech to a lesser extent. In North America, hickory, mesquite, oak, pecan, alder, maple, and fruit-tree woods, such as apple, cherry, and plum, are commonly used for smoking. Other biomass besides wood can also be employed, sometimes with the addition of flavoring ingredients. Chinese tea-smoking uses a mixture of uncooked rice, sugar, and tea, heated at the base of a wok.

Some North American ham and bacon makers smoke their products over burning corncobs. Peat is burned to dry and smoke the barley malt used to make Scotch whisky and some beers. In New Zealand, sawdust from the native manuka (tea tree) is commonly used for hot smoking fish. In Iceland, dried sheep dung is used to cold-smoke fish, lamb, mutton and whale.

Historically, farms in the Western world included a small building termed the "smokehouse", where meats could be smoked and stored. This was generally well separated from other buildings both because of the fire danger and because of the smoke emanations; the smoking of food could possibly introduce polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons which may lead to an increased risk of some types of cancer; however, this association is still being debated.[1][2][3][4][5]

Smoking can be done in four ways: cold smoking, warm smoking, hot smoking, and through the employment of a smoke flavoring, such as liquid smoke.[6] However, these methods of imparting smoke only affect the food surface, and are unable to preserve food, thus, smoking is paired with other microbial hurdles, such as chilling and packaging, to extend food shelf-life.[6]

History

The smoking of food likely dates back to the paleolithic era.[7][8] As simple dwellings lacked chimneys, these structures would probably have become very smoky. It is supposed that early humans would hang meat up to dry and out of the way of pests, thus accidentally becoming aware that meat that was stored in smoky areas acquired a different flavor, and was better preserved than meat that simply dried out. This process was later combined with pre-curing the food in salt or salty brine, resulting in a remarkably effective preservation process that was adapted and developed by numerous cultures around the world.[9] Until the modern era, smoking was of a more "heavy duty" nature as the main goal was to preserve the food. Large quantities of salt were used in the curing process and smoking times were quite long, sometimes involving days of exposure.[7]

The advent of modern transportation made it easier to transport food products over long distances and the need for the time and material intensive heavy salting and smoking declined. Smoking became more of a way to flavor than to preserve food. In 1939 a device called the Torry Kiln was invented at the Torry Research Station in Scotland. The kiln allowed for uniform mass-smoking and is considered the prototype for all modern large-scale commercial smokers. Although refinements in technique and advancements in technology have made smoking much easier, the basic steps involved remain essentially the same today as they were hundreds if not thousands of years ago.[7]

Types by method of application

A "Little Chief" home smoker and racks with hot smoked Pacific salmon

Cold smoking

Cold smoking differs from hot smoking in that the food remains raw, rather than cooked, throughout the smoking process.[10] Smokehouse temperatures for cold smoking are typically done between 20 to 30 °C (68 to 86 °F).[11] In this temperature range, foods take on a smoked flavor, but remain relatively moist. Cold smoking does not cook foods, and as such, meats should be fully cured before cold smoking.[11] Cold smoking can be used as a flavor enhancer for items such as cheese or nuts, along with meats such as chicken breasts, beef, pork chops, salmon, scallops, and steak. The item is often hung in a dry environment first to develop a pellicle; it can then be cold smoked up to several days to ensure it absorbs the smoke flavor. Some cold smoked foods are baked, grilled, steamed, roasted, or sautéed before eating.

Cold smoking meats is not something that should be attempted at home, according to the US National Center for Home Food Preservation: "Most food scientists cannot recommend cold-smoking methods because of the inherent risks."[12]

Cold smoking meats should only be attempted by personnel certified in HACCP [...] to ensure that it is safely prepared.[13]

Warm smoking

Warm smoking exposes foods to temperatures of 25–40 °C (77–104 °F).[6]

Hot smoking

Hot smoking exposes the foods to smoke and heat in a controlled environment such as a smoker oven or smokehouse. Hot smoking requires the use of a smoker which generates heat either from a charcoal base, heated element within the smoker or from a stove-top or oven; food is hot smoked by cooking and flavored with wood smoke simultaneously.[10] Like cold smoking, the item may be hung first to develop a pellicle; it is then smoked from 1 hour to as long as 24 hours. Although foods that have been hot smoked are often reheated or further cooked, they are typically safe to eat without further cooking. Hams and ham hocks are fully cooked once they are properly smoked, and they can be eaten as is without any further preparation. Hot smoking usually occurs within the range of 52 to 80 °C (126 to 176 °F).[11] When food is smoked within this temperature range, foods are fully cooked, moist, and flavorful. If the smoker is allowed to get hotter than 85 °C (185 °F), the foods can shrink excessively, buckle, or even split. Smoking at high temperatures also reduces yield, as both moisture and fat are cooked away.

Liquid smoke

Liquid smoke, a product derived from smoke compounds in water, is applied to foods through spraying or dipping.[6]

Smoke roasting

Smoke-roasting refers to any process that has the attributes of both roasting and smoking. This smoking method is sometimes referred to as barbecuing or pit-roasting. It may be done in a smoke-roaster, a closed wood-fired oven, or a barbecue pit, any smoker that can reach above 121 °C (250 °F), or in a conventional oven by placing a pan filled with hardwood chips on the floor of the oven so that the chips can smolder and produce a smoke-bath.[14] In North America, this smoking method is commonly referred to as "barbecuing", "pit baking", or "pit roasting".

Types by biomass

Wood smoke

Hickory-smoked country-style ribs.

Hardwoods are made up mostly of three materials: cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. Cellulose and hemicellulose are the basic structural material of the wood cells; lignin acts as a kind of cell-bonding glue. Some softwoods, especially pines and firs, hold significant quantities of resin, which produces a harsh-tasting soot when burned; these woods are not often used for smoking.

Cellulose and hemicellulose are aggregate sugar molecules; when burnt, they effectively caramelize, producing carbonyls, which provide most of the color components and sweet, flowery, and fruity aromas. Lignin, a highly complex arrangement of interlocked phenolic molecules, also produces a number of distinctive aromatic elements when burnt, including smoky, spicy, and pungent compounds such as guaiacol, phenol, and syringol, and sweeter scents such as the vanilla-scented vanillin and clove-like isoeugenol. Guaiacol is the phenolic compound most responsible for the "smoky" taste, while syringol is the primary contributor to smoky aroma.[15] Wood also contains small quantities of proteins, which contribute roasted flavors. Many of the odor compounds in wood smoke, especially the phenolic compounds, are unstable, dissipating after a few weeks or months.

A number of wood smoke compounds act as preservatives. Phenol and other phenolic compounds in wood smoke are both antioxidants, which slow rancidification of animal fats, and antimicrobials, which slow bacterial growth. Other antimicrobials in wood smoke include formaldehyde, acetic acid, and other organic acids, which give wood smoke a low pH—about 2.5. Some of these compounds are toxic to people as well, and may have health effects in the quantities found in cooking applications.

Since different species of trees have different ratios of components, various types of wood do impart a different flavor to food. Another important factor is the temperature at which the wood burns. High-temperature fires see the flavor molecules broken down further into unpleasant or flavorless compounds. The optimal conditions for smoke flavor are low, smoldering temperatures between 300 and 400 °C (570 and 750 °F). This is the temperature of the burning wood itself, not of the smoking environment, which uses much lower temperatures. Woods that are high in lignin content tend to burn hot; to keep them smoldering requires restricted oxygen supplies or a high moisture content. When smoking using wood chips or chunks, the combustion temperature is often raised by soaking the pieces in water before placing them on a fire.

Types of smokers

Offset

An example of a common offset smoker.

The main characteristics of the offset smoker are that the cooking chamber is usually cylindrical in shape, with a shorter, smaller diameter cylinder attached to the bottom of one end for a firebox. To cook the meat, a small fire is lit in the firebox, where airflow is tightly controlled. The heat and smoke from the fire are drawn through a connecting pipe or opening into the cooking chamber.

The heat and smoke cook and flavor the meat before escaping through an exhaust vent at the opposite end of the cooking chamber. Most manufacturers' models are based on this simple but effective design, and this is what most people picture when they think of a "BBQ smoker". Even large capacity commercial units use this same basic design of a separate, smaller fire box and a larger cooking chamber.

Upright drum

A diagram of a typical upright drum smoker

The upright drum smoker (also referred to as an ugly drum smoker or UDS) is exactly what its name suggests; an upright steel drum that has been modified for the purpose of pseudo-indirect hot smoking. There are many ways to accomplish this, but the basics include the use of a complete steel drum, a basket to hold charcoal near the bottom, and cooking rack (or racks) near the top; all covered by a vented lid of some sort. They have been built using many different sizes of steel drums, such as 30 US gallons (110 l; 25 imp gal), 55 US gallons (210 l; 46 imp gal), and 85 US gallons (320 l; 71 imp gal) for example, but the most popular size is the common 55-gallon drum.

This design is similar to smoking with indirect heat due to the distance from the coals and the racks, which is typically 24 inches (61 cm). The temperatures used for smoking are controlled by limiting the amount of air intake at the bottom of the drum, and allowing a similar amount of exhaust out of vents in the lid. UDSs are very efficient with fuel consumption and flexible in their abilities to produce proper smoking conditions, with or without the use of a water pan or drip pan.

Vertical water

A typical vertical water smoker

A vertical water smoker (also referred to as a bullet smoker because of its shape)[16] is a variation of the upright drum smoker. It uses charcoal or wood to generate smoke and heat, and contains a water bowl between the fire and the cooking grates.[16] The water bowl serves to maintain optimal smoking temperatures[16] and also adds humidity to the smoke chamber. It also creates an effect in which the water vapor and smoke condense together, which adds flavor to smoked foods.[16] In addition, the bowl catches any drippings from the meat that may cause a flare-up. Vertical water smokers are extremely temperature stable and require very little adjustment once the desired temperature has been reached. Because of their relatively low cost and stable temperature, they are sometimes used in barbecue competitions where propane and electric smokers are not allowed.

Propane

A diagram of a propane smoker, loaded with country style ribs and pork loin in foil.

A propane smoker is designed to allow the smoking of meat in a somewhat more temperature controlled environment. The primary differences are the sources of heat and of the smoke. In a propane smoker, the heat is generated by a gas burner directly under a steel or iron box containing the wood or charcoal that provides the smoke. The steel box has few vent holes, on the top of the box only. By starving the heated wood of oxygen, it smokes instead of burning. Any combination of woods and charcoal may used. This method uses much less wood but does require propane fuel.

Smoke box

This more traditional method uses a two-box system: a fire box and a food box. The fire box is typically adjacent or under the cooking box, and can be controlled to a finer degree. The heat and smoke from the fire box exhausts into the food box, where it is used to cook and smoke the meat. These may be as simple as an electric heating element with a pan of wood chips placed on it, although more advanced models have finer temperature controls.

Electric smokers

The most convenient of the various types of smokers are the insulated electric smokers. These devices house a heating element that can maintain temperatures ranging from that required for a cold smoke all the way up to 135 °C (275 °F) with little to no intervention from the user. Although wood chunks, pellets, and even in some cases automatically fed wood pucks are used to generate smoke, the amount of flavor obtained is less than traditional wood or charcoal smokers.

Trench

Various shapes of primitive smoking racks

In this method the firebox is a narrow trench cut down a slope pointing into the prevailing wind. The middle part of the trench is covered over to make it into a tunnel. At the upper end of the trench is a vertical framework covered to form a chimney within which is placed the rack of foodstuff. At the lower upwind end of the trench is lit a small smokey fire, and sustained day and night until the foodstuff is cured.[17]

Commercial smokehouse

Commercial smokehouses, mostly made from stainless steel, have independent systems for smoke generation and cooking. Smoke generators use friction, an electric coil or a small flame to ignite sawdust on demand. Heat from steam coils or gas flames is balanced with live steam or water sprays to control the temperature and humidity. Elaborate air handling systems reduce hot or cold spots, to reduce variation in the finished product. Racks on wheels or rails are used to hold the product and facilitate movement.

Pellet smokers

A pellet smoker is a temperature controlled smoker that burns wood pellets made of dried out sawdust, about an inch long and 1/4 inch wide. The wood pellets are stored in a gravity-fed hopper that feeds into a motor controlled auger by the temperature regulator. This auger pushes the pellets into the fire pot. An ignition rod within the auger ignites the pellets where a combustion fan keeps them smouldering. The motor and the combustion fan regulate the temperature of the smoker by feeding it more pellets and increasing airflow in the auger. Above the auger is a heat shield to disperse the direct heat before it reaches the heat box to allow the wood smoke to keep the heat box at an even temperature throughout. The heat sensor inside the heat box relays the current temperature inside the box back to the temperature regulator that controls the fan speed and pellet hopper motor, which either increase or decrease the amount of pellets in the auger or the amount of air available to the fire to maintain the desired temperature for the cook.[18]

The popularity of this type of smokers is on the rise after many BBQ pit-masters started using them for competition barbeque.

Preservation

Smoked omul fish, endemic to Lake Baikal in Russia, on sale at Listyanka market.

Smoke is both an antimicrobial and antioxidant, however it is insufficient alone for preserving food as smoke does not penetrate far into meat or fish; it is thus typically combined with salt-curing or drying.

Smoking is especially useful for oily fish, as its antioxidant properties inhibit surface fat rancidification and delay interior fat exposure to degrading oxygen. Some heavily salted, long-smoked fish can keep without refrigeration for weeks or months.

Artificial smoke flavoring (such as liquid smoke) can be purchased to mimic smoking's flavor, but not its preservative qualities.

Competitive smoking

Competition BBQ Smoking is becoming increasingly popular among smoking enthusiasts, especially in the Southern American States, where BBQ enthusiasts come together over a weekend to cook various cuts of meat such as a whole hog or beef brisket to become the best at BBQ.

Organisations such as Kansas City Barbeque Society run competitions all over America.

Health concerns

Regularly consuming smoked meats and fish may increase the risk of several types of cancer[19][20] and cardiovascular disease.[21]

List of smoked foods and beverages

Smoked Gruyère cheese
Fish being smoked in Tanji, The Gambia
Pastrami, a smoked and cured beef product

Some of the more common smoked foods and beverages include:

Beverages
  • Lapsang souchong tea leaves are smoked and dried over pine or cedar fires
  • Malt beverages
    • The malt used to make whisky
    • Rauchbier (smoked beer)
Fruit and vegetables
Meat, fish, and cheese
  • Beef
    • Pastrami (pickled, spiced and smoked beef brisket)
  • Pork
  • Turkey
  • Chicken
  • Sausage
  • Jerky
  • Fish
    • Eel popular in eastern/northern Europe[22]
    • Traditional Grimsby smoked fish (cod and haddock)
    • Haddock and Arbroath smokies (haddock)
    • Buckling, kippers and bloater (herring)
    • Salmon
    • Mackerel
    • Bivalves including oysters and mussels.
  • Egg (eggs and fish eggs)
  • Cheese
    • Adyghe Qwaye (Circassian)
    • Gouda
    • Gruyère
Other proteins
Spices

See also

  • Braising
  • Canning
  • Drying
  • Jerky
  • List of dried foods
  • List of sausage dishes
  • List of sausages
  • List of smoked foods
  • Smoked fish
  • Smoked meat

References

  1. Fritz W, et.al.: Smoked food and cancer US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health
  2. Steck SE, et al: Cooked meat and risk of breast cancer--lifetime versus recent dietary intake Epidemiology
  3. Forsberg ND, et al: Effect of Native American fish smoking methods on dietary exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and possible risks to human health. J. Agric. Food Chem.
  4. Li, J et al: Quantitatively assessing the health risk of exposure to PAHs from intake of smoked meats. Ecotoxicol. Environ. Saf.
  5. Rozentale I, et al: Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in traditionally smoked meat products from the Baltic states. Food Addit. Contam. Part B Surveill.
  6. 1953-, Fellows, P. (Peter) (2017). Food processing technology : principles and practice (4th ed.). Kent: Woodhead Publishing/Elsevier Science. ISBN 9780081019078. OCLC 960758611.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. Briefing: Smoked Food The Herald, 2/19/2002
  8. Janes, Hilly Smoked food; ...on a plate The intense yet subtle taste of smoked food is achieved using methods perfected over centuries The Independent 10/10/2001
  9. Luhr Jensen Smokehouse page 6
  10. "Cold Smoking Recipes & Tips - Food Smoking | Hot Smoked". hotsmoked.co.uk. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  11. Myrvold, Nathan (2011). Modernist Cuisine. The Cooking Lab. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-9827610-0-7.
  12. "Curing and Smoking Meats for Home Food Preservation". nchfp.uga.edu. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  13. "Cold Smoking Meats: Don't Do It". Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  14. "How to Smoke Meat". ChefsBlade. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  15. Hui, Y. H.; et al. (2001). Meat Science and Applications. New York: Marcel Dekker. ISBN 978-0-8247-0548-0.
  16. Backyard Grilling: For Your Grill, Smoker, Turkey Fryer and More - Kate Fiduccia, Teresa Marrone. p. 9.
  17. Tawrel, Paul (2008). Wilderness Camping & Hiking. Paul Tawrell. ISBN 9780974082035.
  18. "A Guide to Pellet Grills - Barbecuebible.com". barbecuebible.com. February 20, 2015. Retrieved December 3, 2017.
  19. Leyshon, Laura (May 11, 2018). "I enjoy eating smoked salmon. How healthy is it?". The Globe and mail. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  20. Rapaport, Lisa (January 19, 2017). "Barbecued and smoked meat tied to risk of death from breast cancer". U.S. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  21. Harvey-Berino, Jean (June 30, 2017). "What Are the Dangers of Eating Smoked Meat?". Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  22. Anthony Bourdain. A local's obsession with smoked eel. "No Reservations". http://www.travelchannel.com/video/a-locals-obsession-with-smoked-eel-11676.

Further reading

  • McGee, Harold (2004). "Wood Smoke and Charred Wood". On Food and Cooking (Revised ed.). Scribner. pp. 448–450. ISBN 978-0-684-80001-1.

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