(Redirected from Smoking (food))
'Smoking' is the process of
flavoring,
cooking, or
preserving food by exposing it to the
smoke from burning or smoldering plant materials, most often
wood.
Meats and
fish are the most common smoked foods, though
cheeses,
vegetables, and ingredients used to make
beverages such as
whisky,
[1] Rauchbier, and
lapsang souchong tea are also smoked.
In
Europe,
alderwood is the traditional smoking wood, but
oak is more often used now, and
beech to a lesser extent. In
North America,
hickory,
mesquite, oak,
pecan, alder,
maple, and fruit-tree woods such as
apple,
cherry and
plum are commonly used for smoking. Other fuels besides wood can also be employed, sometimes with the addition of flavoring ingredients. Chinese
tea-smoking uses a mixture of uncooked
rice,
sugar, and
tea, heated at the base of a
wok. Some North American
ham and
bacon makers smoke their products over burning
corn cobs.
Peat is burned to dry and smoke the
barley malt used to make
whisky and some
beers.
Historically, farms in the western world included a small building termed the ''smokehouse'' where meats could be smoked and stored. This was generally well-separated from other buildings both because of the fire danger and because of the smoke emanations. The
buccan is a smoking device used by some
Native Americans.
Hot smoking and cold smoking
'"Hot smoking"' is a several-hours-long process that can be used to fully cook
meats or
fish;
barbecue is a form of hot smoking. Generally, hot-smoking involves holding the food directly above the fire, or in an enclosure that is heated by the fire. The cooking temperature in a hot-smoking environment is usually between 55 and 80°C (180–250°F) The temperatures reached in hot smoking can kill microbes throughout the food.
'"Cold smoking"' is an hours- or days-long process in which smoke is passed by food which is held in a separate area from the fire. Generally the food is held at room temperatures (15–25.5°C/60–80°F) as it is smoked. Since no cooking takes place, the interior texture of the food generally isn't affected; neither are any microbes living within the meat or fish. For this reason, cold-smoking has traditionally frequently been combined with
salt-curing, in such foods as
Gouda cheese,
ham,
bacon, and cold-smoked fish like
lox (
smoked salmon).
Wood smoke
Hardwoods are made up mostly of three materials:
cellulose,
hemicellulose, and
lignin. Cellulose and hemicellulose are the basic structural material of the wood
cells; lignin acts as a kind of cell-bonding glue. Some
softwoods — especially
pines and
firs — hold significant quantities of
resin, which produces a harsh-tasting soot when burned. Because of this, these woods are generally not used for smoking.
Cellulose and hemicellulose are aggregate
sugar molecules; when burnt, they effectively
caramelize, producing sweet, flowery, and fruity aromas. Lignin, a highly complex arrangement of intelocked
phenolic molecules, also produces a number of distinctive aromatic elements when burnt, including smoky, spicy, and pungent compounds like
guaiacol,
phenol, and
syringol, and sweeter scents like the
vanilla-scented
vanillin and
clove-like
isoeugenol. Guaiacol is the phenolic compound most responsible for the "smokey" taste, while syringol is the primary contributor to smokey aroma. (Hui 512) Wood also contains small quantities of
proteins, which contribute roasted flavors. Many of the odor compounds in wood smoke, especially the phenolic compounds, are unstable, dissipating after a few weeks or months.
A number of wood smoke compounds act as preservatives. Phenol and other phenolic compounds in wood smoke are both
antioxidants, which slow
rancidification of animal fats, and antimicrobials, which slow bacterial growth. Other antimicrobials in wood smoke include
formaldehyde,
acetic acid, and other organic acids, which give wood smoke a low
pH — about 2.5. Some of these compounds are toxic to people as well, and may have health effects in the quantities found in cooking applications. The compounds best demonstrated to have long-term health consequences are the
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs, many of which are known or suspected
carcinogens. Hotter wood fires make more PAHs; hot-burning
mesquite produces twice as much as cooler-burning
hickory.
Since different species of tree have different ratios of components, various types of wood do impart a different flavor to food. Another important factor is the temperature at which the wood burns. High-temperature fires see the flavor molecules broken down further into unpleasant or flavorless compounds. The optimal conditions for smoke flavor are low, smoldering temperatures between 300 and 400 °C (570–750 °F). This is the temperature of the burning wood itself, not of the smoking environment, which sees much lower temperatures. Woods that are high in lignin content tend to burn hot; to keep them smoldering requires restricted
oxygen supplies or a high moisture content. When smoking using wood chips or chunks, the combustion temperature is often lowered by soaking the pieces in water before placing them on a fire.
Preservation
Smoke is a decent antimicrobial and antioxidant, but smoke alone is insufficient for preserving food in practice. The main problem is that the smoke compounds adhere only to the outer surfaces of the food; smoke doesn't actually penetrate far into meat or fish. In modern times, almost all smoking is carried out for its flavor, not its preservative qualities.
In the past, smoking was a useful preservation tool, in combination with other techniques, most commonly
salt-
curing or
drying. For some long-smoked foods, the smoking time also served to dry the food. Drying, curing, or other techniques can render the interior of foods inhospitable to bacterial life, while the smoking gives the vulnerable exterior surfaces an extra layer of protection. For oily fish, smoking is especially useful, as its antioxidant properties delay surface fat
rancidification. (Interior fat isn't as exposed to
oxygen, which is what causes rancidity.) Some heavily salted, long-smoked fish can keep without refrigeration for weeks or months. Such heavily-preserved foods usually required a treatment such as boiling in fresh water to make them palatable before eating.
Some smoked foods and drinks

Slices of
Pastrami, a smoked and cured beef product.
★
Fish
★
★
Lox
★
★
Smoked salmon
★
★
Kippers
★
★
Arbroath Smokies (haddock)
★ Many
pork products are cured and smoked
★
★
Ham
★
★
Bacon
★
Pastrami, pickled, spiced and smoked
beef brisket
★ Various
sausages
★ Traditionally-prepared
jerky
★ The
malt used to make
whisky
★
Rauchbier
★
Lapsang souchong tea leaves are smoked and dried over pine or cedar fires
★
Prunes, which are dried
plums, can be obtained through smoking
★ ''Wumei'' are smoked
ume fruit
★
Chipotles are smoked
jalapeño peppers
★
Smoked Cheeses, such as smoked
gouda
★
Smoked salt
★
Smoked paprika
Other home food preservation methods
★
Pickling
★
Canning
★
Drying (food)
References
★
On Food and Cooking (Revised Edition), McGee, Harold, , , Scribner, 2004, ISBN 0-684-80001-2 pp 448-450, "Wood Smoke and Charred Wood"
★
Meat Science and Applications, Hui, Y.H., , , Marcel Dekker, 2001, ISBN
Notes
1. McGee p. 767: "Malt whiskies from Scotland's west coast have a unique, smoky flavor that comes from the use of peat fire for drying the malt."
External links
★
National Center for Home Food Preservation - How Do I...Cure & Smoke
★
Smoked Fish from A to Z