Smokin in Korea wrote:I am hoping someone can help me ... in regard to achieving a good smoke colour on my bacon.
I have been cold smoking my bacon in a Bradley smoker for 3 hours ...
I don't have a Bradley. So I can't help with regard to the vents.
I only aspire to proper cold smoking.
But I've been studying it!
Hence, there are some (I hope) helpful noises I think I can make...
The Bradley is an American smoker. As such it needs help to do proper *cold* smoking. I've read of putting a chamber (like a cardboard box) and a length of ducting to give 'residence time' and cooling between the smoke generator and the chamber. And of someone else using a coolbox icepack in the smoke flow...
But then the American idea of "cold" smoking seems rather different to the British.
When the British talk about Cold Smoking, it means with the smoke at 30C or less. Thats less than 86F.
Its a l-o-n-g process. With thin smoke.
Specifically talking about smoking bacon, Keith Erlandson writes of 24 hours of *cold* (24-26C) smoking for a "very mild smoke flavour" and 7 days for a "stronger smoke cure".
So 3 hours of properly cold smoke isn't really going to do very much for bacon.
However, the American cousins would be likely to smoke hotter, with thicker smoke, and consequently for a much shorter time.
And they do that to their bacon.
For American bacon, Ruhlman & Polcyn suggest *"hot"* smoking (93C 200F) for 3 hours - the *same* time you say that you are *cold* smoking for - aiming for an internal temperature of 65C 150F. And that's exactly the sort of thing that the Bradley seems to be designed for.
Hence I wonder if your problem is a hot/cold smoking terminology, time and/or temperature confusion?
The other thing that occurred to me was the pellicle.
To get good smoke colour, the meat *has* to have a dry but ideally slightly tacky surface to 'take' the smoke.
Letting the bacon hang in the fridge for 12/24 hours to dry before smoking, should be much better than smoking it while still damp.