Eyetothewest
FNG
I second this wood plan. It’s what I always do with red meat.Slow roll some cherry then hardwood mix ( Oak, Maple, hickory)
Truss is up first so it will hold a uniform shape and you will get a more even cook.
I second this wood plan. It’s what I always do with red meat.Slow roll some cherry then hardwood mix ( Oak, Maple, hickory)
Truss is up first so it will hold a uniform shape and you will get a more even cook.
If you can get it, try mountain mahogany. Worth a trip to the high country IMO!
If I were to guess, I'd say the brining was at fault.I've only done an elk backstrap in my smoker once. It came out with the smoke quality tasting too much like hot dog or beef jerky... Weirdly.
I think I followed either rinella or Hank Shaw's recipe for smoking venison (the salting/brine part) and likely used pecan, apple, or hickory. Smoked it to internal of 130 and let rest.
Think it was the wood choice or brine part? Or the smoke temp and time?
Seasoned. I think for game meat there’s nothing better. It’s crazy hard so just break it up with an axe or maul. It’ll destroy a chainsaw chain pronto!Really? My buddy loves working that wood even though it dulls his tools super quick being hard as iron. He says the smell he gets when it gets hot is amazing. This made me wonder about using it as a smoking wood.
Did you use it seasoned or green?