I have a friend who builds cabinets and furniture and uses cherry a lot. He has offered to give me his scraps for smoking. Just making sure it will be fine to use for smoking meat. Thanks
That's the first thing I asked him and it's not treated. I'll have to traded him some smoked meats for the favor. ThanksAs long as it hasn't been treated it will be great smoker wood.
I agree completely. When my father was alive, he made a lot of furniture, mostly out of oak, and I got all of his scraps. I've tried it some other kiln dries woods before and they were not nearly as good as split.Cherry is a great smoking wood.
But my experience with "lumber" (at least with oak) is that it's just not as flavorable as a split, or even pellets, of the same wood. I've wondered if the kiln-drying that lumber undergoes doesn't also drive out some of the flavor/aroma. Just a guess, and my experience is limited.
But certainly nothing harmful about using kiln-dried lumber of food-grade woods...oak, cherry, maple, etc. Avoid mahogany of course.
Cherry has become my Fav for poultry also. Great flavor for Chicken and Turkey as well as great color to the skin. I might try soaking the wood in water for a day or so and letting it dry for a day or two to add some moisture back to it.Ah that wood just wont do....Have your friend box it up and sent it to me and I will "properly dispose" it for him.....wink wink....
It will be nice and dry so it will burn a bit hotter and faster, hence a lighter smoke flavor vs a split that typically has a higher moisture content....IE Cherry is my #1 FAV wood!
Cherry has become my Fav for poultry also. Great flavor for Chicken and Turkey as well as great color to the skin. I might try soaking the wood in water for a day or so and letting it dry for a day or two to add some moisture back to it.