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I keep seeing this stovetop smoker thing on the cooking shows:
http://www.cameronsmoker.com/Stovetop%20Smoker.aspx Do you have one? Does it work? Love it? Hate it? Worth the US$50? Thanks for sharing, Scooter |
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"Scooter" > wrote in news:1145721205.560148.76150
@e56g2000cwe.googlegroups.com: > I keep seeing this stovetop smoker thing on the cooking shows: > > http://www.cameronsmoker.com/Stovetop%20Smoker.aspx > > Do you have one? Does it work? Love it? Hate it? Worth the US$50? > > Thanks for sharing, > > Scooter They're not generally air-tight so you need a good exhaust fan. And depending on how well they're made and how hot a surface it cooks on, they warp and become useless over time, in my experience. Andy |
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Scooter wrote:
> I keep seeing this stovetop smoker thing on the cooking shows: > > http://www.cameronsmoker.com/Stovetop%20Smoker.aspx > > Do you have one? Does it work? Love it? Hate it? Worth the US$50? > > Thanks for sharing, > > Scooter It works ok for fish and perhaps 1 small slab of ribs. I've also found the pellets work better in it than wood chips do. I have the Cameron roasting pan/smoker combination which is a little different. Mine looks like: http://www.cameronsmoker.com/Cameron...20Roaster.aspx but came with a flat piece of stainless that sits in the bottom for smoking with. I guess they have discontinued this arrangement as the grill is about an inch off the bottom. I use is for smoking salmon once in a while but use a full smoker for racks of ribs, sausage, pork butt etc. I've also found the pellets work better in it than wood chips do. -- Joe Cilinceon |
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On Sat, 22 Apr 2006 08:53:25 -0700, Scooter wrote:
> I keep seeing this stovetop smoker thing on the cooking shows: > > http://www.cameronsmoker.com/Stovetop%20Smoker.aspx > > Do you have one? Does it work? Love it? Hate it? Worth the US$50? > > Thanks for sharing, > > Scooter One of the local chefs Jeff Blank swears by it. I saw it used.. very little smoke escaped out of it. He did some pork tenderloin and then some salmon. Very nicely made. I don't have one. Too many smokers out back already. If you want to smoke stove top it will work. You could do the same thing with an iron skillet/rack and foil. They use nearly a powdered saw dust for smoke fuel. He used alder for the salmon and hickory for the tenderloin. http://www.hudsonsonthebend.com/main.php |
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"Scooter" > wrote:
>I keep seeing this stovetop smoker thing on the cooking shows: > > http://www.cameronsmoker.com/Stovetop%20Smoker.aspx > > Do you have one? Does it work? Love it? Hate it? Worth the US$50? I've got one of these, and I've had it for about 15 years. I originally got it to smoke fish in it, but I haven't done that in years. Now I use it mostly for smoking chicken breasts which I have marinated in a lemon mustard marinade. If I do it right, I can then take the "drippings" and make a sauce out of those. I always like the inner pan below the grid with aluminum foil to make clean up easier. The smoker can tend to leak smoke, and there are some instructions for bending the lid back to try and minimize this. But having an exhaust fan is still a good idea, especially if you have smoke detectors in the area that tend to go off. Overall, I probably wouldn't get it again, as I don't use it enough. But part of the reason I don't use it so much is because I forget I even have it (it's stored in a pantry closet). I think I have too much cooking equipment for my own good. One caution with it is it gets pretty hot on the bottom and can discolor the stove top because it is much larger than a burner. The discoloration of the stove top in my case is because of abuse of the stove top by a prior owner of the house. Never use steel wool or such on porcelain enamel. It will scratch, and then the scratches will fill up with grease. The grease will be invisible until it is overheated, turning it brown. Then every little scratch in the stove top becomes visible. -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) |
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