We do a few things different. I like to keep my smoker temperature down below 100° or as close to as possible. Also, if the block of cheese is able, I set it up on the long edge instead of laying it flat, to increase the amount of exposed surface area to the smoke. Since foil isn't required at lower temperatures, only one edge will had grate marks.
What kind of mozzarella did you use? Whole milk or skim? Low moisture? And did you cook with the cheeses or just eat as is? Also, if yo added more ice, you might have been able to smoke longer. Just a possibility.
I used whole milk mozzarella. And yes, I should have added more ice, but I ran out. They were done though. We ate the cheese as is after a day of it sitting in the fridge. It was very good. I've done this a few times now. It always turns out fantastic. It's always a big hit at parties.
@@CavScout1202 cool. I want to make a smoked Italian sausage with mozzarella or provolone. I figured the smoked cheese would hold up better and taste a whole lot better. We’ll find out.
How the heck did you not melt the cheese at the temps your were talking? There are better and simpler ways to smoke cheese. Further smoking on a open grate (no foil) yields better results.
If anything, it SHOULD be as high as possible because for some reason, he turned the grill on, lol. Next time, just use a smoke tube and place it under the shield of the smoker. Reassemble. Cheese on topmost grate. You don’t want your barrel cresting 90f, ideally. Don’t need all that ice and stuff, just use a smoke tube, pop the vent cap off and add a battery powered fan on low for 2hr - done.
We do a few things different. I like to keep my smoker temperature down below 100° or as close to as possible. Also, if the block of cheese is able, I set it up on the long edge instead of laying it flat, to increase the amount of exposed surface area to the smoke. Since foil isn't required at lower temperatures, only one edge will had grate marks.
If you use a smoker tube. Much better flavor. Can sit on smoke for 3-4 hours. I cold smoke all the time with the tube. Good video
What kind of mozzarella did you use? Whole milk or skim? Low moisture? And did you cook with the cheeses or just eat as is? Also, if yo added more ice, you might have been able to smoke longer. Just a possibility.
I used whole milk mozzarella. And yes, I should have added more ice, but I ran out. They were done though. We ate the cheese as is after a day of it sitting in the fridge. It was very good. I've done this a few times now. It always turns out fantastic. It's always a big hit at parties.
@@CavScout1202 cool. I want to make a smoked Italian sausage with mozzarella or provolone. I figured the smoked cheese would hold up better and taste a whole lot better. We’ll find out.
@@timtyndall4025 Let me know how it turns out.
195º to 200º ?????? Get a smoke tube, so you can smoke the cheeses and keep it UNDER 90º. COLD smoke is the game,....NOT 200º
How the heck did you not melt the cheese at the temps your were talking? There are better and simpler ways to smoke cheese. Further smoking on a open grate (no foil) yields better results.
Is that a grenade ring as a jacket zipper pull ? by the way enjoyed your video's !
Yes. Not too many people notice that detail.
@@CavScout1202 had a few with the pins on my " BOONIE HAT " long time ago keep up the good vids. SEMPER FI !
Sir your cheese is sitting to high in the cook chamber
If anything, it SHOULD be as high as possible because for some reason, he turned the grill on, lol. Next time, just use a smoke tube and place it under the shield of the smoker. Reassemble. Cheese on topmost grate. You don’t want your barrel cresting 90f, ideally. Don’t need all that ice and stuff, just use a smoke tube, pop the vent cap off and add a battery powered fan on low for 2hr - done.
Too*
You didnt pay the cheese tax to the dogs. I pity your dogs.