othmar wrote:Another sugestion, something I do quit often is to put herbs over the shavings, these too will ad to the flavour.
Good point.
I've done a fair bit of hot-smoking lately, with a kettle bbq.
After sorting the kids out, with burgers, sausages etc., when the coals have died down a lot, I put some cherry/ apple/ pear prunings on the coals, put the meat/ fish on the grill & put the lid on with the bottom damper open and the lid damper open slightly. After about ten minutes of this dense smoke, I remove the lid blow on the coals, burn off any remaining wood and then add some bay prunings to the coals and replace the lid for a further five minutes. The bay really comes through. I check the meat and finish off in the oven if required.
A word of caution though. Over-smoking your meat can ruin it. I find subtlety is better.
Cheers, Phill.