Love it! Thank you. By the way, I have a members block. If you want to join, it’s a couple bucks a month and has some nice perks. Supports the channel :)
A great recipe. Clear and concise, explains differences in types of smoked salmon, and also why each step of the process in necessary. Just what I want out of any cooking video.
Trying your recipe right now and will update. I’m about to wash off the cure today. Thanks for all the information in this video, we don’t get that in other videos.
YUM! My chef hubs slow-smokes herb-rubbed salmon filets on our covered charcoal grill used as a smoker and it's fabulous! When you do it that way it's smoky and meaty, and like what we had in Alaska, which is often called "half-smoke"...
If it's hot outside I put a pan of ice (or small bag) in whichever smoker I'm using to try to keep the temp of your smoker below 85 degrees. I always do that when cold smoking cheeses after early spring.
This is by far the best TH-cam video I've watched for cold smoking salmon. Thank you for the detailed instructions. I read somewhere that the smoked salmon could be canned. Do you know how to do that? I've subscribed!
Thank you for the incredible compliment!! I tried my best to fill in the gap between what was on TH-cam and what was missing :) Oh really? I never heard about that, but what I do I I slice the cold smoked salmon into slices and then vacuum seal and freeze it. Just like store bought just made at home and way better :)
Hi! Don't know if you'll see this comment since it's been a year, but wanted to thank you for this video! Wish I had found this when I started cold smoking in my Weber Smokey Mountain, same as how you use your Kettle. I use an 8" maze and can get 18 hours of smoke if I run the sawdust through an electric spice grinder. After countless articles and videos, the time for curing/brining, soaking, drying, smoking, will vary from one expert to another ranging from 20 minutes...to 40 days and 40 nights. Turns out my best and most recent cold smoked salmon is almost identical to what you've described except that only fridge dried for 3 hours, and used your 6 hours smoke and it came out PERFECT! I'm experimenting on smoking white fish (pollack, cod, haddock, and soon I hope mackerel and herring) and wondered if you have any procedure for times, brining vs curing etc.? Growing up in Brooklyn as a kid, when dinosaurs roamed the earth, Mom would come home with smoked mackerel (or herring?) not sure, heads on, skin golden color, meat pulled off the bone and was delicious. Some kids liked candy, for me it was pickled herring and smoked fish. Seems cold smoke followed by hot smoke works on this type of fish, but over salty from curing instead of brining a delicate fish. Had to soak a bit after finishing but came out ok. Keep up the great work and thanks again!
I try to answer to every comment :) lol, slowly slowly my channel is growing. Glad to hear I was able to help!! Unfortunatley I haven't tried white fish.. yet... but used to LOVE slightly tired white fish... even jerky... I haven't tried to make it so I don't want to give you bad directions. Stay tuned though :)
Wow great catch!! I didn’t even notice the mistake. You’re right. Maple, hickory, cherry. But honestly ever since I started using bear mountain bbq pellets, chips and chunks, I stopped all other brands.
I am currently trying this recipe with sea trout - It's about 24 hours into curing process and I will take it out and rinse in another 12 hours. Once the salmon is smoked, how long does it last in the fridge? And how long will it last if vacuum sealed? Thanks!
I need to lower the salinity with a water bath after the dry brine process. If I cold smoke it for 4 hours Is pink salt cure necessary in the dry brine?
no, I wouldn't suggest pink curing salt for smoked salmon. I've done 2-3 hour cures. Granted it is not as effective as overnight though... the saltiness you are getting is either because too much salt, left too long time, or too much pressure on it + too long curing time.
After smoking the salmon and put it in the refrigerator 1 day Before freezing it should you slice it off from the skin and put it in a Ceiling bag Or can you leave it the skin around and put it in a ceiling bag? What is the best method Or can you leave the skin on and freeze it that way
Freezing with the skin is fine, or preslice then freeze. It’s honestly completely up to you and your convenience. By the way, ever considered joining the member block? One of the perks is joining our Discord team to be able to chat directly :)
A lot to do just finishing doing up some not smoked that’s for next time soon mine turned out a little too salty so it’s going into a water bath thanks for that tip. Your end result looks off the hook hahahaha hook ya ok so I will do mine next week just so your recipe is. Again thanks
Absolutely it would, but if doing the vacuum sealed, I’d suggest using the EQ method. Less salt and sugar. It’s a % of the weight of the fish, so less waste too :)
Hello, I tried this recipe with a pretty thick piece of salmon. I just pulled my salmon out of the fridge after it's 48 hour sugar/salt cure. It turned into a thin piece of salmon jerky? I guess I went too long, maybe 24 hours would have been better but it was the same thickness, maybe thicker than the one he did. Anyway to salvage this or am I stuck with salmon jerky. Thanks!
Im sorry for the late response! It flew under my radar. Yes, the longer you leave it, the "tougher" it becomes. More salt penetrates, which is why it is important to try different times of curing. Even overnight will suffice. this batch will stay pretty thick and tough. You can also try to let it sit for 1-4 hours in a water bath.
If you freeze it whole, I’d freeze with the skin as I like how it slices with off the skin when ready to eat. If you want to pre-slice so when you defrost it is slices to eat direct, then without the skin for sure.
When you’re buying salmon, there’s a few things you should know. The first is anything that is Atlantic. Salmon is gonna be farm raised. No, unless it says organic, farm raises usually includes antibiotics. Now antibiotics will most likely kill parasites and bacteria however, healthwise it’s not the best for you. Then you have organic salmon which most likely is also farm raised, but you gotta be a little careful where you’re getting it from. If you’re getting it from Europe, where there’s certain organic certifications for fish then it’s a little bit better. Then there’s wild caught salmon Like Alaskan salmon, but that is usually a certain times of the year. For parasites, I’m not really sure and even as I mentioned the CDC recommends to cook through your fish as eating it raw always poses a risk. The CDC also recommends freezing the fish for I think one week to kill off any parasites and then defrosting it and using it again .
@@ImpossiblyKosher Interesting. I had heard previously that curing doesn't do anything to parasites. Seems like it's hard to honestly get a straight answer on this stuff.
@@greg5143 to ensure the elimination of parasites, it’s recommended to freeze the salmon at -4°F (-20°C) or below for at least seven days. This freezing process effectively kills parasites, making the fish safer for raw or lightly preserved preparations like gravlax or ceviche. (based on info online)
Researching all the various 'procedures'. Basic recipes all seem to be pretty consistant (salt, brown sugar), curing times, pretty consistant 24-48hrs), rinse 30ish minutes in cold water/frid. Pelicle 8-24 hrs, Starting to go sideways now?? Smoke temp- under 80deg F. Smoke time is the real killer. Anything from 4 to 18 hours. How can that be?
18 hours??? That seems way too long. With cold smoke the smokiness is in full intensity and fish can for sure be over smoked. I’d suggest 4-6 hours tops.
Honestly doesn’t seem that difficult. What happens if you put the smoke source below the fish? Assuming it’s not to close, does it make a difference? Thanks in advance!
No it’s really not difficult! Just takes a bit of practice :) Ideally as far away as possible so it stays a “cold smoke”, but if limited on space, you could put the smoke under it. I’d put a lot of ice in there to keep the temps down. If you mean just having smoke coming from a grate below the fish but off to the side, then y’a that’s great too.
@@ImpossiblyKosher Hey friend! Thanks for responding. I know salmon is always pareve but I thought if cooked on a meat grill it would be meat...I've had a kosher kitchen for the last 9 months so I'm fairly new.
Absolutely! :) When cooked on meat surface it is still pareve but don’t use it on dairy plates. Meaning, you can have a glass of milk after if you want. But since it was cooked on meat surface, shouldn’t be on dairy plates. Honestly best is to consult your rabbi though to understand the nuisances a bit better :)
*Take a look* at how I compared *_SALT_* curing *_vs_* *_EQUILIBRIUM_* curing while smoking salmon 🐟 -> th-cam.com/video/pXCAiWQ8HYU/w-d-xo.html
My favourite video for cold smoked salmon. I check it out every time a smoke a side
Love it! Thank you. By the way, I have a members block. If you want to join, it’s a couple bucks a month and has some nice perks. Supports the channel :)
I’ve smoked salmon for years, this is the best most concise useful video I’ve ever seen.Time well spent!
Love it! Glad I was able to help :)
A great recipe. Clear and concise, explains differences in types of smoked salmon, and also why each step of the process in necessary. Just what I want out of any cooking video.
Glad I was able to help!!
Phenomenal video and thank you so much for taking the time. ❤Thanks!
Thank you so much :) doing my best !
The best video ever for cold smoked salmon. Suggestion, for the curing, I add fennel seeds. I use maple wood for smoking. The tast is just amazing.
Trying it next! What about alder wood?
Complete, concise and 100% correct.
Thank you!
very clear presentation. Congrats!
Thank you :)
Trying your recipe right now and will update. I’m about to wash off the cure today. Thanks for all the information in this video, we don’t get that in other videos.
Happy to help! Let me know how it comes out :)
YUM! My chef hubs slow-smokes herb-rubbed salmon filets on our covered charcoal grill used as a smoker and it's fabulous! When you do it that way it's smoky and meaty, and like what we had in Alaska, which is often called "half-smoke"...
Oh yumm!!!!
Great video, concise, precise, and easy to follow.
Thank you!
Thank you very much. I just never frozen it before.
I find it helps with the texture and the smokiness :)
Can’t wait to try this myself!!!
You won’t regret it at all!
If it's hot outside I put a pan of ice (or small bag) in whichever smoker I'm using to try to keep the temp of your smoker below 85 degrees. I always do that when cold smoking cheeses after early spring.
100% agreed on this! in the winter season it's easy, summer keeping temps low seems to be the hardest part.
This is by far the best TH-cam video I've watched for cold smoking salmon. Thank you for the detailed instructions. I read somewhere that the smoked salmon could be canned. Do you know how to do that? I've subscribed!
Thank you for the incredible compliment!! I tried my best to fill in the gap between what was on TH-cam and what was missing :)
Oh really? I never heard about that, but what I do I I slice the cold smoked salmon into slices and then vacuum seal and freeze it. Just like store bought just made at home and way better :)
Looks amazing. Can't wait to try this.
When you do, let me know how it comes out :)
Thank you for the video I made it for my family and everybody love it
Great to hear!! If you want, post it on your Instagram and tag us :) @impossibly.kosher
You need to check out Smokai from New Zealand. I have two and I love them.
I saw them, the only thing I was curious about is if it would work on a pellet grill?
Hi! Don't know if you'll see this comment since it's been a year, but wanted to thank you for this video! Wish I had found this when I started cold smoking in my Weber Smokey Mountain, same as how you use your Kettle. I use an 8" maze and can get 18 hours of smoke if I run the sawdust through an electric spice grinder. After countless articles and videos, the time for curing/brining, soaking, drying, smoking, will vary from one expert to another ranging from 20 minutes...to 40 days and 40 nights. Turns out my best and most recent cold smoked salmon is almost identical to what you've described except that only fridge dried for 3 hours, and used your 6 hours smoke and it came out PERFECT!
I'm experimenting on smoking white fish (pollack, cod, haddock, and soon I hope mackerel and herring) and wondered if you have any procedure for times, brining vs curing etc.? Growing up in Brooklyn as a kid, when dinosaurs roamed the earth, Mom would come home with smoked mackerel (or herring?) not sure, heads on, skin golden color, meat pulled off the bone and was delicious. Some kids liked candy, for me it was pickled herring and smoked fish. Seems cold smoke followed by hot smoke works on this type of fish, but over salty from curing instead of brining a delicate fish. Had to soak a bit after finishing but came out ok. Keep up the great work and thanks again!
I try to answer to every comment :)
lol, slowly slowly my channel is growing.
Glad to hear I was able to help!!
Unfortunatley I haven't tried white fish.. yet... but used to LOVE slightly tired white fish... even jerky...
I haven't tried to make it so I don't want to give you bad directions.
Stay tuned though :)
Will do! Thanks for getting back to me. I've got a lot of your videos to get through. Cheers!
Haha enjoy! Let me know what you think :)
When smoking a salmon and after you smoke it , leave it in the refrigerator 1 day, Is it better to leave the skin on or skin off when you freeze it?
Fish at grocery stores have the skin on js
Really good 👍🏿
Thanks!
You mention that the wood pellet blend is Apple Hickory Cherry but that package shown says Maple Hickory Cherry. Can you clarify what you use?
Wow great catch!! I didn’t even notice the mistake. You’re right. Maple, hickory, cherry.
But honestly ever since I started using bear mountain bbq pellets, chips and chunks, I stopped all other brands.
Look so good!
Thank you!! If you try it, let me know how it comes out :)
Awesome!!!
Thanks!!
Awesome recipe! SUBSCRIBED bro #Kosher
thanks Eric!
Nice presentation. Thank you. One question: Is it too salty or too sweet?
Thank you! Never comes out too sweet to be honest. If I leave it cute too long it becomes a bit too salty for my liking.
I am currently trying this recipe with sea trout - It's about 24 hours into curing process and I will take it out and rinse in another 12 hours. Once the salmon is smoked, how long does it last in the fridge? And how long will it last if vacuum sealed? Thanks!
Enjoy! I think a week in the fridge, and vacuum sealed maybe 2-3?
Wonderful 💞
Thank you!!
Great video
Thank you!
After you cold, smoke your salmon. Can you leave the skin on or leave it off when you freeze it
I need to lower the salinity with a water bath after the dry brine process. If I cold smoke it for 4 hours Is pink salt cure necessary in the dry brine?
no, I wouldn't suggest pink curing salt for smoked salmon.
I've done 2-3 hour cures. Granted it is not as effective as overnight though...
the saltiness you are getting is either because too much salt, left too long time, or too much pressure on it + too long curing time.
After smoking the salmon and put it in the refrigerator 1 day Before freezing it should you slice it off from the skin and put it in a Ceiling bag Or can you leave it the skin around and put it in a ceiling bag? What is the best method
Or can you leave the skin on and freeze it that way
Freezing with the skin is fine, or preslice then freeze. It’s honestly completely up to you and your convenience.
By the way, ever considered joining the member block? One of the perks is joining our Discord team to be able to chat directly :)
A lot to do just finishing doing up some not smoked that’s for next time soon mine turned out a little too salty so it’s going into a water bath thanks for that tip. Your end result looks off the hook hahahaha hook ya ok so I will do mine next week just so your recipe is. Again thanks
Enjoy!!
My ratio is 2 sugars to 1 salt. comes out perfect
you have a halavi kettle grill?
hey Justin, I have one for both :)
Instead of putting in the pans wouldn't it also work putting in vacuum sealed bag to cure also?
Absolutely it would, but if doing the vacuum sealed, I’d suggest using the EQ method. Less salt and sugar. It’s a % of the weight of the fish, so less waste too :)
Hello, I tried this recipe with a pretty thick piece of salmon. I just pulled my salmon out of the fridge after it's 48 hour sugar/salt cure. It turned into a thin piece of salmon jerky? I guess I went too long, maybe 24 hours would have been better but it was the same thickness, maybe thicker than the one he did. Anyway to salvage this or am I stuck with salmon jerky. Thanks!
Im sorry for the late response! It flew under my radar. Yes, the longer you leave it, the "tougher" it becomes. More salt penetrates, which is why it is important to try different times of curing. Even overnight will suffice.
this batch will stay pretty thick and tough. You can also try to let it sit for 1-4 hours in a water bath.
After smoking your salmon Should you freeze it with skin on or off
If you freeze it whole, I’d freeze with the skin as I like how it slices with off the skin when ready to eat.
If you want to pre-slice so when you defrost it is slices to eat direct, then without the skin for sure.
How do you guard against parasites since it's not cooked? Is there something you look for when buying the salmon?
No, so curing process kills bacteria and usually parasites too, but it’s always a risk as per cdc when not cooked.
@ImpossiblyKosher does getting something like farm raised lower the chances? I assume less bacteria on controlled farms.
When you’re buying salmon, there’s a few things you should know. The first is anything that is Atlantic. Salmon is gonna be farm raised.
No, unless it says organic, farm raises usually includes antibiotics. Now antibiotics will most likely kill parasites and bacteria however, healthwise it’s not the best for you.
Then you have organic salmon which most likely is also farm raised, but you gotta be a little careful where you’re getting it from. If you’re getting it from Europe, where there’s certain organic certifications for fish then it’s a little bit better. Then there’s wild caught salmon Like Alaskan salmon, but that is usually a certain times of the year.
For parasites, I’m not really sure and even as I mentioned the CDC recommends to cook through your fish as eating it raw always poses a risk.
The CDC also recommends freezing the fish for I think one week to kill off any parasites and then defrosting it and using it again .
@@ImpossiblyKosher Interesting. I had heard previously that curing doesn't do anything to parasites. Seems like it's hard to honestly get a straight answer on this stuff.
@@greg5143 to ensure the elimination of parasites, it’s recommended to freeze the salmon at -4°F (-20°C) or below for at least seven days. This freezing process effectively kills parasites, making the fish safer for raw or lightly preserved preparations like gravlax or ceviche. (based on info online)
What is the best salmon to use to cold smoke
Not sure to be honest, I just make whatever is fresh and available
Thank you very much
Researching all the various 'procedures'. Basic recipes all seem to be pretty consistant (salt, brown sugar), curing times, pretty consistant 24-48hrs), rinse 30ish minutes in cold water/frid. Pelicle 8-24 hrs, Starting to go sideways now?? Smoke temp- under 80deg F. Smoke time is the real killer. Anything from 4 to 18 hours. How can that be?
18 hours??? That seems way too long. With cold smoke the smokiness is in full intensity and fish can for sure be over smoked.
I’d suggest 4-6 hours tops.
Honestly doesn’t seem that difficult.
What happens if you put the smoke source below the fish?
Assuming it’s not to close, does it make a difference?
Thanks in advance!
No it’s really not difficult! Just takes a bit of practice :)
Ideally as far away as possible so it stays a “cold smoke”, but if limited on space, you could put the smoke under it. I’d put a lot of ice in there to keep the temps down.
If you mean just having smoke coming from a grate below the fish but off to the side, then y’a that’s great too.
So do you consider this salmon Parve in your home? Is your grill meat or dairy?
Salmon is always pareve.
Grill is meat.
@@ImpossiblyKosher Hey friend! Thanks for responding. I know salmon is always pareve but I thought if cooked on a meat grill it would be meat...I've had a kosher kitchen for the last 9 months so I'm fairly new.
Absolutely! :)
When cooked on meat surface it is still pareve but don’t use it on dairy plates. Meaning, you can have a glass of milk after if you want. But since it was cooked on meat surface, shouldn’t be on dairy plates.
Honestly best is to consult your rabbi though to understand the nuisances a bit better :)
Anybody else notice how full that knife is at 4:10?
How full the knife is?
You do not need weight to press salmon. It is absured to press the delecate salmon flesh by pressing it.
Actually I agree. If you see my newer videos, I don’t press it or I press it for way less time.
Tell us the chef Ramsey
amen! ;)
I would definitely not use the aluminum trays.
How come?
Finally a Jewish smoked salmon at home! Break out the Temp-tee. What about nova - that’s your smoked salmon?
Loool
What do you want me to make?
Shalom shalom.yammy
Amen amen :)