- Nov 23, 2023
- 52
- 28
I’ve done 4 smokes in the smokehouse with temperatures from 225° up to 415° in a double walled cedar smokehouse with an offset brick fire box 2 feet away. Last night I ran into an issue inside the smokehouse and I need to make some modifications and get advice.
I was smoking chicken, wings, and Texas Twinkies. One of the recipes said for the last 30 minutes to kick the temperature up to 400° and that was problematic as I almost set the smokehouse on fire.
1). In the future, should I just only smoke things that do not exceed 300° in the smokehouse? I am having no difficulty at all getting temperatures to 400° if I need to, though I’ve learned to manage the fire down at 225°
2). The pipe is 6 inches in diameter, and I do not have a screen over the intake to the smoke House, as I wasn’t sure if I was going to gum it up with creosote, and occasionally embers go through it. But most of my smokes have been very clean, smoking with no white smoke whatsoever coming out of the smokehouse. Would you recommend me putting a screen on both the exit from the firebox as well as the intake into the smoke House?
2). I lined all the walls and ceiling with very fine aluminum flashing sheets, thinking that would be a barrier between the heat and the wood to keep it from catching fire. Not sure if aluminum flashing really is that fireproof?
3). My grilling racks are half inch expanded steel and they get nice and hot, which is what I desire. However, the support racks on each side of the smokehouse, and there are 4 sets, are 1” x 2” strips of red fir screwed into the aluminum flashing and into the wood on the other side.
I am wondering if I need to have something other than wood to support the grill racks. I also wonder if the screws that go into the supports would get hot enough to transfer heat through the wall and still catch the wood on the other side on fire?
4). Should I line it with some sort of fireproof board, foam, 1000 degree Celsius fiberglass insulation? Rockwool, etc.?
So I’m looking to do some design modification before I smoke anything again, I don’t want to make sure that I totally fireproof the inside. Any at all suggestions are needed…
I was smoking chicken, wings, and Texas Twinkies. One of the recipes said for the last 30 minutes to kick the temperature up to 400° and that was problematic as I almost set the smokehouse on fire.
1). In the future, should I just only smoke things that do not exceed 300° in the smokehouse? I am having no difficulty at all getting temperatures to 400° if I need to, though I’ve learned to manage the fire down at 225°
2). The pipe is 6 inches in diameter, and I do not have a screen over the intake to the smoke House, as I wasn’t sure if I was going to gum it up with creosote, and occasionally embers go through it. But most of my smokes have been very clean, smoking with no white smoke whatsoever coming out of the smokehouse. Would you recommend me putting a screen on both the exit from the firebox as well as the intake into the smoke House?
2). I lined all the walls and ceiling with very fine aluminum flashing sheets, thinking that would be a barrier between the heat and the wood to keep it from catching fire. Not sure if aluminum flashing really is that fireproof?
3). My grilling racks are half inch expanded steel and they get nice and hot, which is what I desire. However, the support racks on each side of the smokehouse, and there are 4 sets, are 1” x 2” strips of red fir screwed into the aluminum flashing and into the wood on the other side.
I am wondering if I need to have something other than wood to support the grill racks. I also wonder if the screws that go into the supports would get hot enough to transfer heat through the wall and still catch the wood on the other side on fire?
4). Should I line it with some sort of fireproof board, foam, 1000 degree Celsius fiberglass insulation? Rockwool, etc.?
So I’m looking to do some design modification before I smoke anything again, I don’t want to make sure that I totally fireproof the inside. Any at all suggestions are needed…