Man I need to start making my own sausage. How long are you smoking them in there? Are they fully cooked when your done?
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DIY Sausage Smokehouse
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Originally posted by Dawg View PostForgive me for my lack of knowledge here but does the pipe sit underneath the smokehouse and the smoke rise through the mesh or do you have it plumbed in somewhere that I overlooked?
Originally posted by Blue Tick View PostMan I need to start making my own sausage. How long are you smoking them in there? Are they fully cooked when your done?
I sent this to BBH last night via PM because he asked the same question. I'm just going to cut/paste my reply to him. This is just what we like....many folks do it many different ways but this works best for us.
We pipe the smoke into it from a small "fire box" on the side of our smokehouse. The firebox is several feet away to try to disperse some of the heat as it flows through the pipe. There is some natural heat, of course, but 90% of the heat is in the firebox and not in the smoke or smoke house. Whether the meat takes the smoke well or not depends on humidity. Low humidity and cold temps like after a blue norther or cold front is the best. It usually takes us 4-5 hours to smoke 100-400 links in low humidity and cool weather. If it is super humid like fog, mist or rain, we have had to smoke it up to 17 hours and that sucks. We don't do that unless we have too. The 17 hour episode was bad timing. Some of us had traveled 7 hours to make it and the forecast was incorrect. We had to do it and it ended up taking a LONG, LONG time. We like it under 50 deg outside temps, to keep sausage from spoiling in the smokehouse. The cooler the better when making and smoking. You can buy cure, aka Tender Quick, and be a little safer if it is warmer but it is not necessary if you do it on a colder day.
You will want a 1/4 ring of reddish tint/smoke-ring around the link after you cook. We'll make a couple of half links for testing and cook them at 4-5 hours and then later if needed to check. If it has the ring, we'll smoke it another hour and then start vacuum packaging. If not, its time for more beer until it does...
When it gets close to being done...it'll go from this color...
to this...
Last edited by Smart; 12-30-2011, 11:56 AM.
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Bringing this back up. Jason, what do you use in your firebox and how long does it last? Is the fire box the only source of heat/smoke you have for the smokehouse? Do you have to keep adding to the fire box to keep it going? What are you using for smoke, do you have a cast iron plate with chips?
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Originally posted by Blue Tick View PostBringing this back up. Jason, what do you use in your firebox and how long does it last? Is the fire box the only source of heat/smoke you have for the smokehouse? Do you have to keep adding to the fire box to keep it going? What are you using for smoke, do you have a cast iron plate with chips?
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Originally posted by Blue Tick View PostBringing this back up. Jason, what do you use in your firebox and how long does it last? Is the fire box the only source of heat/smoke you have for the smokehouse? Do you have to keep adding to the fire box to keep it going? What are you using for smoke, do you have a cast iron plate with chips?
We burn hickory, mesquite or pecan wood. we use small split logs we get or buy chunks at Academy. It depends on what we have and what we want to do that year as far as wood type choice. I prefer mesquite my buddy prefers hickory . Sometimes we mix them.
You do have to add some wood throughout the day much like any stick burning smoker. A full sausage smoke may last 5 hours or 15 hours depending on the temp and more importantly humidity. Humidity equal looooong smoke. We try to smoke on a blue norther weekend where it is cold and dry.
.Last edited by Smart; 07-06-2012, 06:40 AM.
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