- Oct 20, 2021
- 34
- 48
With a nice cold front passing through north GA this weekend, I decided to put together my version of a mailbox mod and try it out on some cheese.
My cold smoker is a Char-Broil smoker side box attachment that I picked up (NIB) off Facebook for $20. I got an aluminum duct the I cut. One piece I slid into the chip tray loader. Another piece of duct I taped to the outlet of the smoker box using dryer duct aluminum tape. Then, I used a section of 3” flex tube to connect the box to the smoker.
I used Bear Mountain Bold BBQ pellets that I ground in a coffee bean grinder.
I loaded the dust into a smoke tube. (The foil is to catch the dust that falls out of the holes of the tube.)
I loaded up some mild cheddar and pepper Jack into the smoker.
And, here is the cheese after 4 hours of smoke.
Now, it’s sitting in a fridge in my garage.
Question, though. I’m planning on letting it sit for two weeks before trying. Should I leave them just sitting on the tray in the fridge for the two weeks, or vacuum seal them?
My cold smoker is a Char-Broil smoker side box attachment that I picked up (NIB) off Facebook for $20. I got an aluminum duct the I cut. One piece I slid into the chip tray loader. Another piece of duct I taped to the outlet of the smoker box using dryer duct aluminum tape. Then, I used a section of 3” flex tube to connect the box to the smoker.

I used Bear Mountain Bold BBQ pellets that I ground in a coffee bean grinder.


I loaded the dust into a smoke tube. (The foil is to catch the dust that falls out of the holes of the tube.)

I loaded up some mild cheddar and pepper Jack into the smoker.

And, here is the cheese after 4 hours of smoke.

Now, it’s sitting in a fridge in my garage.
Question, though. I’m planning on letting it sit for two weeks before trying. Should I leave them just sitting on the tray in the fridge for the two weeks, or vacuum seal them?