Has anyone cold smoked pork tenderloins or have any advice on smoking them?? They run about 1# each, they are not the pork loins. Also wondering about cold smoking bb bacon at the same time. Weather here looks to be about 40 for a high tomorrow.
Thanks
Hi TDuke and Welcome!!
I have never cold-smoked tenderloins before. I have cured them and then smoked them, but I have always used heat. They have always turned out great.
Seemore
TDuke;
Welcome to the forum.
Because cold smoke can be interpreted in several way, can you further explain what you want to do.
For the tenderloins; is it that you want to apply some smoke as a flavoring, then finish off at a higher temperature? Or are you planning to dry cure the tenderloin; which will require curing?
In general when cold smoking I keep the cabinet under 90°F; 80°F is better. How long I keep it in the smoker depends on what my final goal is, and I always use the Cold Smoke Setup (http://www.johnwatkins.co.uk/personalpages/coldsmoking.htm)
I was planning to cold smoke to add flavor and finish off on the grill. Was also going to smoke some cheese at the same time and figured I could do two things at once.
TDuke
Quote from: TDUKE on February 15, 2009, 07:15:08 AM
I was planning to cold smoke to add flavor and finish off on the grill. Was also going to smoke some cheese at the same time and figured I could do two things at once.
TDuke
You could cold smoke them both at the same time, just place the tenderloin on the bottom self to avoid cross contamination. I would apply 40 - 80 minutes of smoke on the tenderloin, and leave the cheese in for 2 to 5 hours. I generally apply 2-3 hours of smoke on the cheese. After it has been smoked the cheese needs to be wrapped or vacuum sealed and aged in the refrigerator for at least a week before eating, or it will taste like an ash tray. When smoking both at the same time, I would choose maple or apple.