Good-day all. I’m new to the culinary art of smoking, but since getting my smoker about a month ago I’m loving it. I’m retired and, as you can see from the title, we live in north Florida. The wife has been after me for a while to get into smoking. What finally prompted me to dive in was this past Thanksgiving. I bought a smoked brisket (it wasn’t cheap!) for our holiday dinner from a local reputable smoke house and we’re woefully disappointed; it was over done and dry. That pushed me over the edge and here I am.
After much research I picked up a 30” Char-Broil Digital Electric smoker with which to start this tasty adventure. I chose this type of smoker because of space limitations on our porch. The only real delma I’ve had to deal with equipment wise is getting enough smoke out of it, but I’ve read this is typical of electric smokers. The addition of a 12” pellet tube solved that problem; now I get a solid 5-6 hours of smoke. From what I’ve read meats absorb the smoke flavor in the early stages of the cook, and 5-6 hours of smoke should be plenty for any meat.
So far I’ve cooked a few pork butts, ribs, pork chops, chicken, and chuck roasts. Most came out great; however, there was definitely a learning curve on the chuck roasts. My last one came out nice and moist. If I can keep this up there may be a briske in my future.
Well I probably shared more then anyone cares to read, but I’m excited to get on to my next cook. Have a smoking’ day!
After much research I picked up a 30” Char-Broil Digital Electric smoker with which to start this tasty adventure. I chose this type of smoker because of space limitations on our porch. The only real delma I’ve had to deal with equipment wise is getting enough smoke out of it, but I’ve read this is typical of electric smokers. The addition of a 12” pellet tube solved that problem; now I get a solid 5-6 hours of smoke. From what I’ve read meats absorb the smoke flavor in the early stages of the cook, and 5-6 hours of smoke should be plenty for any meat.
So far I’ve cooked a few pork butts, ribs, pork chops, chicken, and chuck roasts. Most came out great; however, there was definitely a learning curve on the chuck roasts. My last one came out nice and moist. If I can keep this up there may be a briske in my future.

Well I probably shared more then anyone cares to read, but I’m excited to get on to my next cook. Have a smoking’ day!