trapperbruce wrote:
thanks for the reply grisnell..i understand "treated as fresh" part but wondering about the 20+hrs its in the smoker .yours is all under 75*f and you say the fat breaks down after that .is that the only reason for not using higher temps ..im wondering if fish was like pork and not to be kept in the 90-140*f range while smoking with out "cure"
its not that im going to plan on warmer temps but scared to try it if for some reason my temp goes up for a while and im not payin attention, ie drinkin ,sleepin or heaven forbid workin
ive alway hot smoked salmon before and only use a wet brine cause its always worked well for me . itried a rub once and it turned out way to salty..the problem was not rinseing it well enough but didnt find that out till it was smoked so never tried it again
thanks
Yes, 20+ hours is correct and you
will have to keep an eye on the temperature! However, you don't have to smoke it uninterruptedly. If something else comes up or you need to take a break or sleep, move the fish to the refrigerator, shut down the smoker and continue next day. My 20 hours usually last from Friday evening to Sunday afternoon, with spare time inbetween.
Yes, the temperature
is critical. If it gets above -let's say- 32 C for a prolonged time, some of the fat will separate and the proteins will start coagulating. This will end up in a product totally different from cold-smoked; shall we say "luke-smoked"? It will become something between cold-smoked and hot-smoked. You won't be able to cut it in slices. It may well be palatable, but something totally different. Why this doesn't happen with meat is because meat contains different proteins that are much less temperature-sensitive.
A wet brine will work well with hot-smoked fish, since the heat will evaporate the moisture. In cold-smoke it's better to use dry rub since it is essential that the product should be as dry as possible (the same principle applies to smoking meat or sausages). If you use 65 gms salt/kg fillet it will be fine, much less salty than the commercial stuff. Even my wife who is very sensitive to salty taste hasn't complained.