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negoc8
07-14-2008, 04:03 PM
After a number of attempts I have combined a few recipes to come up with what I think has turned out to be some fine smoked trout!
http://www.ifish.net/gallery/data/500/medium/HPIM16551.JPG

1/2 Gallon of water
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup salt
2 Tablespoons Garlic powder
2 Tablespoons chili powder
3 Tablespoons lemon juice
10-12 trout
soak over night in brine in a glass cake pan, pat dry and lay out on smoker racks for about an hour, preheat and get the smoke going good in the smoker, smoke until desired firmness, Sunday was hot and dry, so I only smoked em for about 4 hours using two pans of alder chips in a little chief smoker. The family all agreed that this was the best trout recipe!

Oregon_Lass
07-15-2008, 07:59 AM
We have a Big Chief, will have to try that recipe, they look great, thanks for posting :excited:
Did you freeze the trout first or throw them in fresh?

Chesapeake
07-15-2008, 09:58 AM
Not trying to hijack, just thought I would add mine to an existing post.

I tried a recipe last week with a brown trout and was surprised at the results. I've never tried it in the oven, or with liquid smoke but the wife was out of town. I was buisy with a 6 month and a 3 year old. The fish was getting old in the fridge, so I gave it a shot. Nodody I had taste it new it wasnt out of the smoker until I told them. Even my Dad didnt notice.

4 cups brown sugar
1 cup salt
1 Tbs garlic powder
1 Tbs onion powder
1 Tbs black pepper

Mix dry ingredients in bowl and then sprinkle in a good amount (maybe 2Tbs) of liquid smoke while you mix so it doesnt clump the sugar.

Layer the filets of fish and dry brine and leave covered in the fridge over night. Rinse fish, let dry on broiler pan rack, then place in oven (still on broiler pan) set at Warm (175) with door cracked (I closed an oven mit in the top corner of the door) for 4 hours.

This recipe came out quite well and it was a brown trout. I think with a kokanee or salmon, and an adjustment of the sugar/salt ratio to 3:1 it could be a great way for those without a smoker, or smoker skills to make a decent smoked fish.

negoc8
07-16-2008, 11:39 AM
We had some frozen and some fresh fish, couldn't tell the difference when they came out of the smoker.

I love the no smoker recipe. I use a similar one in the winter when the little chief takes tooooo long to cook em.

Cannon
07-16-2008, 02:30 PM
here are a couple of recipes that I like

With this one I cut back on the salt.

2qts H2O
3 cups browm sugar (Cane, not the molasses type)
1 cup rock salt (non-iodized)
Heat water to disolve, and add while heating:
2 tablespoons garlic powder
2 tablespoons Tabasco sauce
Cool before adding fish. I put the fish in overnight, then put on
racks without rinsing.

and my favorite:
SPICY SWEET
2 1/2 cups brown sugar
1/2 cup rock salt
1 Tbl sp chilly powder
1 Tbl sp onion powder
1 Tbl sp garlic powder
1 Tbl sp white pepper
1/2 Tbl sp cinamon
2 Tsp allspice
1 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tsp cloves
1 tsp nutmeg
1 tsp ginger

Mix ingedients lay fish skin side down in glass container pour brine over fish
cover and refrigerate for 12 hours. Rince, pat dry & let sit for 2 to three
hours. Smoke to desired texture.

Both of these recipes came from:
Smoking Salmon & Steelhead
Scott & Tiffany Haugen

Fishtail
07-16-2008, 11:06 PM
I just put 12 large Diamond Lake trout in brine, so we'll see later today how they smoke up. I used the spicy sweet recipe just to be a little different. Later today, I'll be brining some duck breast for jerky:meme::meme:

Chukar Chaser
07-18-2008, 08:15 AM
I have one that is simular as one above. Works great. I use it with salmon and kokanee.

3 cups brown sugar
1 cup non-ionized salt
1 Tbs garlic salt
1 Tbs onion salt
1 Tbs celery salt

Mix dry ingredients in bowl. Place a layer of filets in a plastic or glass bowl and sprinkle dry ingreidents over a layer of filets. Continue to layer the filets and place covered in the refridgerator for 4 to 8 hours depending on how thick the filets are. Rinse fish with cold water to remove all brine, dry with paper towels. Place filets on smoker racks until the filets get a glazed shiny look to them, then smoke until done.

StickFish
07-18-2008, 11:08 AM
All Very simular

2lbs (one package) Brown Sugar
1 cup Kosher salt
4Tbls Dry Mustard
1Tbls White Pepper
1Tbls Garlic Powder
1Tbls Cayenne

Filet fish skin on
Score meat to skin
layer meat down in dry brine for one day, flipping and shaking every few hours
1 1/2 hour on the traeger at 275 with Alder

deeptrout
07-18-2008, 12:40 PM
grandmas recipe, about 100 years of use in our family. dates back to a time when smoking was a necessity for food preservation.

water

enough pickling salt to make an egg float , about a dime worth of diameter showing above the water level- thats enough

molasses to taste, I like it when the brine looks like clean pennzoil, not quite 30w havoline

a shot of good brandy, put some in the brine too

put meat in, take it back out same time tomorrow

No metal, ever. none.

smoke till firm, flavor the meat with chips, not the brine.

If you like pepper and dill and lemon, you might as well save yourself the trouble and just bake it.

thats how grandma did it, works for me. now I am hungry again. if you try this simple recipe and like it, let me know and I will pass it on to grandma, shes 92, and would appreciate knowing.

Chukar Chaser
07-19-2008, 05:49 PM
I was in Seattle last week and stop in Pikes Street Market. I stopped at one of the fish markets where I was looking at the smoked salmon. The guy offered my a sample of several smoked fish. The one that stood out was an alder smoked salmon. It wasn't sweet or salty just very moist and full of flavor. Does anyone know how they are smoking these fish? I'd sure like to be able to dupicate there method...

Sliderite
07-19-2008, 09:24 PM
I have found that a dry brine without water comes out best. I use pretty much the same mixture for Salmon, Steelhead and Tuna but adjust the salt depending on the fish. I used to do the wet brine with water but it always came out to salty.

marshworm
07-20-2008, 06:35 AM
anyone ever tried just a little salt and pepper with a "cold smoke" of alder,cherry,hickory or etc?
seems like you might retain the natural taste of the fish better?

STGRule
07-20-2008, 07:04 AM
I put a copy of this thread in the Ifish recipe board. :food:

adobe wall
07-20-2008, 07:56 AM
Another "no smoker" recipe to add that I use for kokanee.

Mix Kikkoman's Teriyaki sauce and brown sugar to a 4:1 ratio (1 cup teriyaki to 1/4cup brown sugar). Put the filets in a bag and cover with the mix, squeeze the air out of the bag. Let it rest in the refrigerator for one or two days then grille.

It is a very quick recipe for grilled filets that tastes a lot like my favorite smoker recipe. Kokes are good any way you want to cook them but this is our favorite.

regards, aw

Chesapeake
07-21-2008, 08:05 AM
anyone ever tried just a little salt and pepper with a "cold smoke" of alder,cherry,hickory or etc?
seems like you might retain the natural taste of the fish better?


Some of the best smoked fish just uses salt.

Just layer the fish in rock salt (time is dependant on thickness, but 30 minutes to 1 hour should suffice for kokanee)
Rinse off all the salt with cold water
Place fish on racks and let dry
Smoke!!

This method takes a little practice to get the salt time correct. Best to do the testing on small batches.

marshworm
07-22-2008, 10:29 AM
I use rock salt also and am experimenting with a morton product used for curing meats.
Thanks, Rick

Cannon
07-25-2008, 08:09 AM
I just put 12 large Diamond Lake trout in brine, so we'll see later today how they smoke up. I used the spicy sweet recipe just to be a little different. Later today, I'll be brining some duck breast for jerky:meme::meme:I put up 24 pounds of kokanee fillets (courtesy of Wickiup Res) in the sweet hot brine last night. It should all be eaten and gone by Sunday night. Once the word gets out, it goes fast!

Fishstik 1
07-26-2008, 11:11 PM
Dang straight, that is the only recipe for trout , I know, my momma shoed me the same one when i was a youngan.:twocents:

Salmonslayer2
07-27-2008, 03:58 PM
I use Morton Tender Quick. It is easy to use. I use a plactic container and put one layer of fish in. Then sprinkle Tender Quick salt on the fish untill it starts to turn white. Then I sprinkle Brown Sugar on. Then start over again with another layer. Add no water. When you are done put the fish in the refrigator for 2 to 2 1/2 hours. Rinse the fish off and start smoking. If your fish is thicker such as salmon I leave it in the refrigator over night. Everyone tells me this is the best. Its easy and Quick.
Enjoy Larry

woodsy188
07-29-2008, 06:08 AM
Before I got a smoker I got hooked on a good pre-made recipe by Clem Strechelin. Its a no-smoke oven option. I know you can buy his stuff at BI-MART. I still use his mix, but add to it and use the Big Chief. It produces some great jerkey, haven't tried it on fish.
Another good thing, Clem's an oregonian living in La Pine. Really nice guy!
http://www.clemsseasonings.com/index.html