Nutczak wrote:
I hope you are able to get the cedar smell out of your smoker, it may still taint other foods from the resins on the inner walls.
I had a friend who thought we would season his pit with pine, we needed to sandblast the interior and use harsh chemicals to get that funky smell ot of it, and then reseason with oil and burn green hardwoods to re-caot the steel again.
I may just put the whole smoke can into the bbq and burn any residue out of it, or filling it with red-hot charcol may do the same thing. Otherwise, the tin cost me £1 from PoundLand and was filled with chocolate waffers that the kids loved....so the worst doesn't seem so bad.
I hope to get some seasoned logs from a place outside town this weekend...so the next attempt may be soon. I've been experimenting making sawdust by drilling into the ends of some logs I have in the garden using a large flat-bit (also not suitable for food...they are eucalyptus) and it makes a lovely fine powdery dust.
Kev