Whole Smoked Whitefish

Started by gregcantwell, March 10, 2018, 01:10:20 PM

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gregcantwell

Love the Bradley Smoker. I'm on my second version (I wore out the 1st, Bradley Original, and have gone to the 4 Rack Digital). Before the Bradleys, I used an offset barrel smoker. The one downside of the Bradleys is the dimensions of the smoking chamber. Smoking a whole Whitefish was/is one of my specialties. A whole Whitefish (24"+) just doesn't fit onto the Bradley racks (15" x 11"). The presentation for holidays and parties was always a hit. Here is my solution.

Brine and dry as usual (I use red wine instead of sugar)

While brining, bend some 12 gage wire (sturdy coat hanger wire) into an elongated "S" hook

When the fish is dry, run the "S" hook through the mouth.

Anchor the bottom hook (larger end) into the backbone of the fish. This will support the weight of the fish during the entire smoking duration. I've read several posts where the individuals attempted to hang the fish from the tails..which always seem to pull off during smoking.

Remove the horizontal racks and hang the fish from the variable Damper at the top of the smoker.

When hanging from the Damper (in the wide open position), the "S" hook renders the Damper inoperable. I solve that by using terracotta feet (used for pots). These can be manually adjusted for any flow rate.

Smoke as usual.

When the fish is smoked to the desired doneness, unhook from the Damper and prepare for the presentation.
Remove "S" hook.

Finished product! I usually surround with a bed of parsley.



Greg Cantwell

tskeeter

Outstanding, Greg!  Beautiful whitefish.

Edward176

Very Impressive gregcantwell, we thoroughly enjoy smoked fish and I would love to try your method AND your recipe, if you would share it? I'd appreciate the times and temperatures you also used. My brother goes fishing in these parts and White fish is very common here (as is Northern Pike and Goldeye) and I've been wondering if smoking it would be possible. Anything would beat steamed Whitefish. Thanks

mybad

That has to be sooo good. Looks fantastic!

gregcantwell

Recipe for the whole Smoked Whitefish

Before we start...I have 2 versions of "Smoked Whitefish"
1. Smoked to preserve the fish for later in the season 4 to 5 hours at 220°...pretty dry but good for months
2. Smoked but not dried out for use as an appetizer (crackers, cheese, etc) 2 to 3 hours at 220°

Brine: A bottle of red wine (cheap bottle of red zin (big sugar), 1.5 cups kosher salt, 2 tablespoons peppercorns, 3 bay leaves, 2 tablespoons mustard seeds. 5 qts water. Mix all ingredients, in a large saucepan, and heat until the salt is completely dissolved. Add ice to cool down mixture (cool to the touch). Add fish and soak in brine, in the refrigerator, for 4 to 6 hours. .
Dry fish: Let 'air dry" in the refrigerator for 3 to four hours.

Smoke for 2 to 3 hours at 220°, I use alder wood for most fish recipes.
Greg Cantwell

pmmpete

#5
Smoking lake whitefish whole, including the head, seems to be a tradition in some parts of the country.  But I prefer to fillet my whitefish, cut the fillets up into portion-sized pieces, and vacuum pack and freeze the pieces after they have been brined and smoked.  The brine gets into the meat better, the smoke gets into the meat better, and I can defrost an amount which I can eat in a week or so.

Whitefish have thin meat next to their rib bones, and thick meat above their rib bones.  After I remove the rib bones from whitefish fillets, I cut off the meat which was next to the rib  bones, which produces a long thin strip and a long thick strip, and I cut each strip in half.  Then I brine and smoke the thin pieces for shorter periods of time than the thick pieces.  By doing this, the thin meat next to the rib bones doesn't get too salty or too dry as a result of the brining and smoking times required to produce good results with the thicker meat portions of the fillets.

This particular batch of whitefish was brined with Kummok's wild smoked salmon brine recipe, with the salt content increased to adjust the recipe to 60 degrees salometer.  I adjust all of my brine recipes to this level of saltiness because it helps me produce consistent results with a variety of recipes and with a variety of kinds of fish.  For example, I have learned how long to brine 10"-12" kokanee fillets, pieces of fillets from 20" whitefish, and pieces of fillets from 26" lake trout with a 60 degree salometer brine, and the same brining times work with a variety of recipes which I have standardized at that level.









Some pictures from a recent batch of smoked whitefish are shown below.

Salmonsmoker

Quote from: Edward176 on March 19, 2018, 10:50:32 AM
Very Impressive gregcantwell, we thoroughly enjoy smoked fish and I would love to try your method AND your recipe, if you would share it? I'd appreciate the times and temperatures you also used. My brother goes fishing in these parts and White fish is very common here (as is Northern Pike and Goldeye) and I've been wondering if smoking it would be possible. Anything would beat steamed Whitefish. Thanks

Edward176, I grew up in NW Ontario, and we smoked a lot of Northern Pike, Lake Trout. You can also make pickled Northern, same as you would herring. It's quite good.
Give a man a beer and he'll waste a day.
Teach him how to brew and he'll waste a lifetime.

pmmpete

#7
A member of the forum sent me a person message asking "Just reading your post on smoked whitefish what salometer do you use?"  I thought it would be worth posting my response to that question, which was as follows:

I own a salometer, but rarely use it.  I use a salinity table to produce a brine with a desired degree of salinity.  Salinity tables are available in a variety of sources, such as at https://www.meatsandsausages.com/sausage-making/curing/making-brine or in the Oregon State University publication "Preparation of Salt Brines for the Fishing Industry, by K. S. Hilderbrand, Jr., which is available at https://seafood.oregonstate.edu/sites/agscid7/files/snic/preparation-of-salt-brines.pdf.  You can also use one of these charts to estimate the salinity of the brine called for in a fish smoking brine recipe.  I say estimate because many smoking brine recipes include ingredients other than salt and water which also contain salt, such as soy sauce or teriyaki sauce.  An issue with using a salometer to measure the salinity of a fish smoking brine recipe is that most recipes include dissolved ingredients such as sugar which will affect the reading of a salometer.  So perhaps the best you can do is to use a salinity table to calculate the salinity of the brine which will be created by just the water and salt components of a brine recipe, or to use a salinity table to adjust the water and salt components of a brine recipe to produce a desired salinity (ignoring the other ingredients in the brine).

Another issue relating to the salinity of fish brine recipes is that most fish smoking brine recipes call for a certain number of cups of salt, but a cup of table salt, pickling salt, kosher salt, and sea salt will each have considerably different weights.  As a result, the best way to specify the quantity of salt in a recipe is by weight, not by volume.  That's why salinity tables list the quantity of salt by weight.

An example of the way that I adjust the amount of salt in the fish brine recipes I use to produce a 60 degree Salometer brine is a recipe which provided for 5 oz. of salt in 6 cups of water, which ignoring the other ingredients in the recipe produces a 34.5 degree Salometer brine.  I adjusted that to 9.4 oz. of salt in 6 cups of water to produce a 60 degree Salometer brine.