I'm very old. This time of year our whole valley smelled wonderful! Yes, we lived in the sticks. It was slaughter time. Slaughter, butcher and smoke or sugar/salt cure pork. Most folks had a smoke house full of hams, bacon loin etc. It was common to see big wooden boxes on back porches that held a ham or two packed in either salt or sugar to cure. All three methods, smoking, and sugar and salt curing are just methods of removing moisture from the meat as to preserve it. In late summer months it was harvest and canning time. Ladies would gather with pressure cookers and can 'put up' vegetables. You couldn't buy out of season veggies back then and 'store bought ' canned vegetables just can't complete with home grown. Great job young lady!
Thumbs up to the screen. Similar thought is to have the two boards offset by slightly more than the width of the hole when drilling. This means that when not in use, the board is slid inline to close the whole unit (the majority of the time).
If you need to bring your chamber temp down throw a pan of ice on the bottom rack to cool the smoke as it rises. Bonus if you are a drinker, you can refreeze that water and have smoked ice for cocktails. They also sell a maze that will burn for about 12 hours. This would be more for homemade bacon or sausages but always good to have another trick up your sleeve
Nice simple design! I may have to build one like it. The only change I think I might make is the vent sliders to change them that the holes are fully closed when the panel is fully lined up, this will help keep bugs and critters out when it's not in use.
I had the same thought on the holes. It should be easy enough for her to do the same by just replacing the sliding parts with ones that are drilled differently.
My favorite part is watching you just bop along with whatever you’re listening to on your isoTunes. It always looks like you’re having a great time in the shop.
I built one using cedar paneling , made it a table top version still have to attach the door and wipe it down with the stuff you used . looks good the next one will be better
My only suggestion (especially because you're using softwood) is to seal the ends of your lumber to prevent warping, prevent warping. Air gaps don't matter much, ventilation is good! Very nice build, I build my own cold smoker years ago and love every second of it. Especially when the temperature drops, naturally keeping the food at a safe temperature. Cheers!
As someone who has built 'Cold' smokers, I really liked the way yours turned out, so professional looking. I have used the following items to build mine: a computer tower to hold the fire box which was ducted at the top going to the bottom of a small refrigerator, then used a Traeger grill with a small smoker container and finally used cardboard moving boxes. Yes cardboard... Lined the inside with aluminum foil, put shelves in, place a baking tray in bottom to hold the smoker & pellets with a stand to hold a smaller baking tray which held Ice. Ice was used to help control temperature inside. Used a total of 3 large moving boxes. Read where the outlet hole was near the bottom with on the inside a U-shape channel was design to fit over the on the inside, but did not go all the way to the top. This caused more smoke to be kept inside but at the same time still allowed venting, using a control cover on the outside of the bottom hole. Wound up giving one to a college student who loved my Smoked Gouda Cheese. I would cold smoke vegetables and meat after bringing them home from the grocery store. I even cold smoked meats & vegetables which were in the freezer, they were removed first then placed into the cold smoker. Enjoy cold smoking, BTW, try cold smoking your spices, why pay high prices like one would for "Smoked Paprika"??? Those cold smoked spices were so much more flavour than regular store bought ones. Enjo your Cold Smoker.
I coldsmoke Cream Cheese all the time. I currently use my kettle grill with a smoking coil on it, but plan to make this cabinet instead. Unfortunately in Texas you can only do this in the late fall and winter as cream cheese or blocks of cheese will melt in the typical heat. Cover it with your favorite Rub or Herbs then smoke it. I typically smoke it at least 3 hours, but the longer you leave it on the smokier it gets. Spread on crackers or toasted baguette rounds. I also make different Hot Pepper Jams. I spoon a liberal amount over the smoked cream cheese then spread on crackers, etc. It's great on a Charcuterie Board.
Increase the size a little bit to accommodate a hot plate and small pan and you have a "Hot" smoker. This will allow for making jerky and smoked sausages. I have a purchased one but it's on its last legs and want to build one now
Awesome build. I love smoking cheese and I think I need to build this to bump up my capacity. The smoke tubes are the best invention ever. Don't have to fire up the pellet smoker or worry about keeping the temperature down.
Good morning, April! Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy! Smoked cheese! YES! I'll be there tomorrow🤣!! What a cool, fun project. Thanks for sharing. Have a great week! God bless.
Great design! You may want to consider putting your holes at the bottom to feed oxygen to your smoke generator and to create a small convection current inside your smoker.
I currently make smoked cheese by applying a premade smoke liquid. I want to do the cold smoking technique to experiment with different wood smoke to find the ideal taste for me. Thank you for your tutorial April, very helpful!
Great build. I built one long time ago. One thing I learned is you need some screen on the vent holes as rodents love to invade the smoker even when there is smoke present.
Good morning April. What can I say? These videos just keep getting better and better - but that's of course to be expected from a talented and self sufficient woman such as yourself. Your construction and remodeling skills are impeccable. TYFS and have a Happy Thanksgiving. 😎
Thanks for sharing the COLD SMOKE smoking method with this video April . I will tell you that smoked cheese is the best once you get it right. I will be making one of these for myself . Stay safe and keep up the great videos. Fred.
Smoking is awesome! Like wrapping a steak in bacon without the fat. We do steaks, chickens, turkeys, crab. Wonderful. Haven’t tried cold smoking but this is my motivation.
Sawdust is sometimes best to use to long slow smokes. A tip for that is you can take pellets used for pellet smokers, add a little bit of water to dissolve the coating on the pellets and you’ve got sawdust. You do have to do some drying jn the oven, but you can make a whole bunch and just store it for the next time. Smoked cheese is so good!
1. what was the temperature inside box? Cold smoking requires a temperature below protein denaturation point (~110F/46C). I find it hard that a volume that small wouldn't get heat up above that. A built-in thermometer is definitely needed. 2. By placing the smoke source in the same chamber with the food, you are not exactly smoking that food, but rather covering it with sod (and considering that cold smoking takes much longer than regular smoking, that's a lot of carcinogen material on your food). The smoke source has to be in a separate space connected to the food chamber by a channel. As smoke travels through that channel, it 1) gets chilled; 2) heavier particles settle down and you get much "cleaner" smoke in the food chamber.
This looks amazing. My brother built something similar for my recent birthday (he's still fine-tuning a few things) for smoking cheese. I make semi-hard and hard cheeses in my kitchen, but will practice on store bought ones first: don't want to mess up something that's been aging 3 - 24 months.
I use my round charcoal Weber for cold smoking. I don't use charcoal, just the grill. Just put the metal smoke tube where the charcoal would go and put the food on the main grate.
YES, PLEASE give us some info on that pellet holder gizmo. I've cobbled together different designs from the internet but none have really worked well. The one you used looks pretty reliable.
My suggestion would be to slide the panels then drill the holes. That way the boards will not overhang when the vents are closed to make storage much easier. Also to add a stop to the vents so you don't accidentally slide them out.
I would do it with about 8" round pieces of wood so you can simply rotate the round piece to open/close the vents, and it never moves from its mounted position.
If you need something with racks this is one way. If you hang things like hams, sausages or fish, a simple metal garbage can will do. Drill a hole in the side near the bottom (or two), drill a hole in the lid. Drill 4 holes opposite each other near the top rim to push two wooden rods though and there you go. BTW: if you use something fire resistant under the smoke generator, you can use a large cardboard box in a blink.
I saw one made from a minifridge and a smoke box connected by metal flexible dryer vent hose. The minifridge kept the temps low so you could cold smoke meats, like fish, bacon and sausages. I am going to buy one from a college town pawnshop and make one.
This seems like a fun and relatively easy project, so I might even be able to build one! I'll add it to my list of projects for next spring when the weather here in the PNW starts to get nicer.
@@AprilWilkerson thanks, love the channel. Hint; if you run a vent pipe from the hot smoker to the cold smoker you can take advantage of the smoke while doing fish, poultry and meats etc...
Ok, I got questions. Now I understand that it would make this job a lot easier and quicker if I would use plywood. However, the whole idea is to avoid the glue, whether it holds the plywood or anything else for that matter. Why did you need to use glue ? Can someone explain to me if Im write or wrong and why ? Thank you
When my old lady quit meat, I got rid of my cabinet. It literally never occurred to me we could have been doing cheese this whole time 🤦 Sick work, April!
3:49 by putting the grooves in the paneling towards the inside, isn't smoke going to seep out thru them? You made a point of saying the tongue and groove prevents gaps, but then put the gaps in. Wouldn't having the flat side in (and joining to the framing) been better?
I need one of these, great job. Make the vents bigger, and pop a heat lamp in the bottom, and you are ready for dehydrating as well. Do you have a link for the smoke tube?
I've got 3 or 4 months left, that I can cold smoke, here in Arizona. (It's hard to smoke at 80 degrees, when it is 110 outside.) April, look into an UDS smoker. 55 gallon drum based smoker. Did you know that a Weber kettle rack fits PERFECTLY in a 55 gallon drum? steve
Have you considered making a small offset box for the fire/smoke? I've tried cold smoking salmon exactly as you are doing it and even that small little smoldering bit of wood pellets made it hotter than I would like inside of my smoker box.
Nice build, just a thought on the vent holes, why not drill them when the sliding part is NOT in it's home position so that the vents are closed instead of open when the smoker is not in use. (basically the exact opposite of what you did)
Looks great and very fun build. I just wonder what effect the smoke will have on the wood. Maybe like whiskey barrels in the future and the wood honey might be worth watching. Great video.👍👍♥️
I'm very old. This time of year our whole valley smelled wonderful! Yes, we lived in the sticks. It was slaughter time. Slaughter, butcher and smoke or sugar/salt cure pork. Most folks had a smoke house full of hams, bacon loin etc. It was common to see big wooden boxes on back porches that held a ham or two packed in either salt or sugar to cure. All three methods, smoking, and sugar and salt curing are just methods of removing moisture from the meat as to preserve it. In late summer months it was harvest and canning time. Ladies would gather with pressure cookers and can 'put up' vegetables. You couldn't buy out of season veggies back then and 'store bought ' canned vegetables just can't complete with home grown. Great job young lady!
You should install screening on vent holes. To prevent guests from helping themselves.
Thumbs up to the screen.
Similar thought is to have the two boards offset by slightly more than the width of the hole when drilling. This means that when not in use, the board is slid inline to close the whole unit (the majority of the time).
I bet you could use some of that nylon screen. That way it won't rust and since it's not hot, it won't melt.
The benefit of saving your scrap wood. Awesome work. Thanks for sharing.
I didn't even know I needed this, now my life will not be satisfying until I build one. Thank you.
I completely understand. I feel that way too! How did I know about this? :) Thanks for watching.
As someone who has built several smokers over the years, it’s nice to see an alternative way . Great job April
The cheese mellows and gets better with age. A couple weeks in the refrigerator after smoking does wonders.
We vacuum pack them and put them in the fridge for a few weeks and they are much better!
If you need to bring your chamber temp down throw a pan of ice on the bottom rack to cool the smoke as it rises. Bonus if you are a drinker, you can refreeze that water and have smoked ice for cocktails. They also sell a maze that will burn for about 12 hours. This would be more for homemade bacon or sausages but always good to have another trick up your sleeve
Smoked ice cubes!
That’s amazing.
Nice simple design! I may have to build one like it. The only change I think I might make is the vent sliders to change them that the holes are fully closed when the panel is fully lined up, this will help keep bugs and critters out when it's not in use.
I had the same thought on the holes. It should be easy enough for her to do the same by just replacing the sliding parts with ones that are drilled differently.
My favorite part is watching you just bop along with whatever you’re listening to on your isoTunes. It always looks like you’re having a great time in the shop.
An empty tuna can with a lit and smoldering briquette with the wood on it works well and has yet to get too how for us. Great vid!
I built one using cedar paneling , made it a table top version still have to attach the door and wipe it down with the stuff you used . looks good the next one will be better
My only suggestion (especially because you're using softwood) is to seal the ends of your lumber to prevent warping, prevent warping. Air gaps don't matter much, ventilation is good! Very nice build, I build my own cold smoker years ago and love every second of it. Especially when the temperature drops, naturally keeping the food at a safe temperature. Cheers!
For those on a budget, one lit charcoal briquette with wood chips, a wood chunk or pellets works well too. Not too hot and good smoke.
Awesome! Thanks for sharing and for watching.
This is a great project April! Appears easy to build and looks like it works great! Thanks for sharing this idea!
You are so welcome!
A beautiful design to keep it so simple. Easy peasy. You do the work so we don’t have to!
As someone who has built 'Cold' smokers, I really liked the way yours turned out, so professional looking. I have used the following items to build mine: a computer tower to hold the fire box which was ducted at the top going to the bottom of a small refrigerator, then used a Traeger grill with a small smoker container and finally used cardboard moving boxes. Yes cardboard... Lined the inside with aluminum foil, put shelves in, place a baking tray in bottom to hold the smoker & pellets with a stand to hold a smaller baking tray which held Ice. Ice was used to help control temperature inside. Used a total of 3 large moving boxes. Read where the outlet hole was near the bottom with on the inside a U-shape channel was design to fit over the on the inside, but did not go all the way to the top. This caused more smoke to be kept inside but at the same time still allowed venting, using a control cover on the outside of the bottom hole. Wound up giving one to a college student who loved my Smoked Gouda Cheese. I would cold smoke vegetables and meat after bringing them home from the grocery store. I even cold smoked meats & vegetables which were in the freezer, they were removed first then placed into the cold smoker.
Enjoy cold smoking,
BTW, try cold smoking your spices, why pay high prices like one would for "Smoked Paprika"??? Those cold smoked spices were so much more flavour than regular store bought ones.
Enjo your Cold Smoker.
I coldsmoke Cream Cheese all the time. I currently use my kettle grill with a smoking coil on it, but plan to make this cabinet instead. Unfortunately in Texas you can only do this in the late fall and winter as cream cheese or blocks of cheese will melt in the typical heat.
Cover it with your favorite Rub or Herbs then smoke it. I typically smoke it at least 3 hours, but the longer you leave it on the smokier it gets.
Spread on crackers or toasted baguette rounds. I also make different Hot Pepper Jams. I spoon a liberal amount over the smoked cream cheese then spread on crackers, etc.
It's great on a Charcuterie Board.
Increase the size a little bit to accommodate a hot plate and small pan and you have a "Hot" smoker. This will allow for making jerky and smoked sausages. I have a purchased one but it's on its last legs and want to build one now
I've built a number of smokers but not a cold smoker. I must say that this one is COOL I might have to give this one a try. Thanks for sharing...
You are such a class act! It shines through each and every video you post. Thank you.
Aw, thanks! I'm glad you enjoy my channel. Thanks for watching.
Really nice setup. Great for Christmas, family around for smoked cheese and crackers with a tipple of cherry
That's a great idea!
Nice build April. Thank you for sharing. Links to the actual smoker device and smoke pellets would have been nice.
Stop complaining
I saw an electric cold smoker from Cabela's for $80. This is $16 on Amazon.
I just came across your channel and I feel fortunate. I enjoy how you present your builds!
Glad you like them! Thanks for watching.
The sound of the brad nailer echoing through your shop is insanely satisfying.
You might consider screening the vent holes to keep wasp nests and the like from building nests inside .
Awesome build. I love smoking cheese and I think I need to build this to bump up my capacity. The smoke tubes are the best invention ever. Don't have to fire up the pellet smoker or worry about keeping the temperature down.
Good april I'm happy to watching your videos thank you
Good morning, April! Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy! Smoked cheese! YES! I'll be there tomorrow🤣!! What a cool, fun project. Thanks for sharing. Have a great week! God bless.
Great design! You may want to consider putting your holes at the bottom to feed oxygen to your smoke generator and to create a small convection current inside your smoker.
Great idea! Thanks for sharing and for watching.
I currently make smoked cheese by applying a premade smoke liquid. I want to do the cold smoking technique to experiment with different wood smoke to find the ideal taste for me. Thank you for your tutorial April, very helpful!
Great! I'm glad you found it useful. Thanks for watching.
Great build. I built one long time ago. One thing I learned is you need some screen on the vent holes as rodents love to invade the smoker even when there is smoke present.
Good morning April. What can I say? These videos just keep getting better and better - but that's of course to be expected from a talented and self sufficient woman such as yourself. Your construction and remodeling skills are impeccable. TYFS and have a Happy Thanksgiving. 😎
Thank you! You too! I'm glad you enjoy my channel. Thanks for watching.
@@AprilWilkerson You're quite welcome, April.
If that was a scrap bin build challenge that's a win for sure! Too cool!
Thanks for sharing the COLD SMOKE smoking method with this video April . I will tell you that smoked cheese is the best once you get it right. I will be making one of these for myself . Stay safe and keep up the great videos. Fred.
try cold smoking garlic bulbs, adds great flavour!
Was the metal part bought or made? More info on that part would be appreciated! Gonna need to make one of these now...
Smoking is awesome! Like wrapping a steak in bacon without the fat. We do steaks, chickens, turkeys, crab. Wonderful. Haven’t tried cold smoking but this is my motivation.
Sawdust is sometimes best to use to long slow smokes. A tip for that is you can take pellets used for pellet smokers, add a little bit of water to dissolve the coating on the pellets and you’ve got sawdust. You do have to do some drying jn the oven, but you can make a whole bunch and just store it for the next time. Smoked cheese is so good!
Oh wow this is so cool. The adjustable vents is genius. I need to taste that cheese.
1. what was the temperature inside box? Cold smoking requires a temperature below protein denaturation point (~110F/46C). I find it hard that a volume that small wouldn't get heat up above that. A built-in thermometer is definitely needed.
2. By placing the smoke source in the same chamber with the food, you are not exactly smoking that food, but rather covering it with sod (and considering that cold smoking takes much longer than regular smoking, that's a lot of carcinogen material on your food). The smoke source has to be in a separate space connected to the food chamber by a channel. As smoke travels through that channel, it 1) gets chilled; 2) heavier particles settle down and you get much "cleaner" smoke in the food chamber.
You did an awesome job on your smoker 😊
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
You amaze me with your creative skills
I've got a load of scrap wood so I'm going to give this a go. Thanks very much.
Excellent! Enjoy the build and using it. Thanks for watching.
That's a great lookin' Cold Smoker. I'm sharing this with a friend who routinely smokes kosher salt in various flavors.
Awesome! Thanks for watching.
This looks amazing. My brother built something similar for my recent birthday (he's still fine-tuning a few things) for smoking cheese. I make semi-hard and hard cheeses in my kitchen, but will practice on store bought ones first: don't want to mess up something that's been aging 3 - 24 months.
I would use cedar; for taste and outdoor use.
I use my round charcoal Weber for cold smoking. I don't use charcoal, just the grill. Just put the metal smoke tube where the charcoal would go and put the food on the main grate.
Great idea! Thanks for sharing and for watching.
Thank you for this build, April!! Next step will be to build one of these and cold smoke anything that I can lol keep these awesome videos coming!!
Sounds great! Thanks for watching.
YES, PLEASE give us some info on that pellet holder gizmo. I've cobbled together different designs from the internet but none have really worked well. The one you used looks pretty reliable.
My suggestion would be to slide the panels then drill the holes. That way the boards will not overhang when the vents are closed to make storage much easier. Also to add a stop to the vents so you don't accidentally slide them out.
I would do it with about 8" round pieces of wood so you can simply rotate the round piece to open/close the vents, and it never moves from its mounted position.
I would do it...who am I kidding? I never do any of these projects. I do enjoy watching others and the thought process it entails.
I see the scammers are here
@@1988dgs yep
As a Smoking Man, I have GOT to build me one of those! Thank you for this video!
Very cool! My standard pellet smoker might need a friend.
I put olive oil in my smoker with garlic to infuse the flavour wile smoking. Gives the oil a nice garlic smoking flavour
If you need something with racks this is one way. If you hang things like hams, sausages or fish, a simple metal garbage can will do. Drill a hole in the side near the bottom (or two), drill a hole in the lid. Drill 4 holes opposite each other near the top rim to push two wooden rods though and there you go.
BTW: if you use something fire resistant under the smoke generator, you can use a large cardboard box in a blink.
That looks bloody good.
I would change the holes around. So when it is flush it's closed off, that when when it isn't in use the holes are closed
April, that was a great project. Thanks for sharing.
Glad you liked it!
Such a great and innovative build! Looks awesome!
Glad you like it!
I saw one made from a minifridge and a smoke box connected by metal flexible dryer vent hose. The minifridge kept the temps low so you could cold smoke meats, like fish, bacon and sausages. I am going to buy one from a college town pawnshop and make one.
Awesome! Thanks for watching.
Great idea! Nice simple build!
This is a great looking little cold smoking cabinet! I love how you think outside the box and use your creativity in your projects. Very cool April🤙🏾❤
I would line the bottom with ceramic tiles so it doesn't catch a light the timber box
I made a smoker out of an old fridge. I used it for making venison jerky.
Awesome! Sometimes people use old water heaters and turn them into smokers. Thanks for watching.
@@AprilWilkerson My uncle turned an old file cabinet into one. He had 3 levels and the bottom drawer was for the fire.
I love your videos. I send you a hug from the island of Puerto Rico
This seems like a fun and relatively easy project, so I might even be able to build one! I'll add it to my list of projects for next spring when the weather here in the PNW starts to get nicer.
I highly recommend you smoke salt. Himalayan rock salt is best. Have fun!
Great Job April
Another great project, where did you get the pellet smoker holder?
Used office file cabinets work great for smoking...
"keep the faith people and keep on keeping on"
Awesome! That's a great idea! Thanks for sharing and for watching.
@@AprilWilkerson thanks, love the channel.
Hint; if you run a vent pipe from the hot smoker to the cold smoker you can take advantage of the smoke while doing fish, poultry and meats etc...
Ok, I got questions. Now I understand that it would make this job a lot easier and quicker if I would use plywood. However, the whole idea is to avoid the glue, whether it holds the plywood or anything else for that matter. Why did you need to use glue ? Can someone explain to me if Im write or wrong and why ? Thank you
WHAT ISTHE GIZMO YOU HAVE TO PUT THE PELLETS ND WHERE CAN I GET ONE?
I LIKE THIS, A GREAT IDEA.
STAY SAFE AND GOD BLESS..
Thanks, you too!
Great design and build, never thought of smoking olives or okra, how were they? Thanks
They are fabulous although everything is great! We fight over the okra! Thanks for watching.
When my old lady quit meat, I got rid of my cabinet. It literally never occurred to me we could have been doing cheese this whole time 🤦
Sick work, April!
Love this idea❤❤
Super fun!
Try smoked trout. 😉
3:49 by putting the grooves in the paneling towards the inside, isn't smoke going to seep out thru them? You made a point of saying the tongue and groove prevents gaps, but then put the gaps in. Wouldn't having the flat side in (and joining to the framing) been better?
Please provide more information about the pellet smoker that you put in the bottom.
I need one of these, great job. Make the vents bigger, and pop a heat lamp in the bottom, and you are ready for dehydrating as well.
Do you have a link for the smoke tube?
Thanks for the video.
Glad you enjoyed it.
You mentioned not using treated or finished wood. Wood glue okay? I love your content and am a fan for years! Thanks
Can you link that thing that held the smoke pellets?
I can't wait to build this one!!!
Love from KSA April
I've got 3 or 4 months left, that I can
cold smoke, here in Arizona. (It's hard
to smoke at 80 degrees, when it is 110
outside.)
April, look into an UDS smoker. 55
gallon drum based smoker. Did you
know that a Weber kettle rack fits
PERFECTLY in a 55 gallon drum?
steve
Try smoking my favs kosher salt, paprika, cumin and salmon.
Those and the cheese make excellent Xmas gifts for people that have everything!
Great idea! Thanks for sharing and for watching.
Great job 👍
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Great build i will definetly try to make it 😁 can any wood be used or does it have to be cedar? 😊
April I think I would've put the Grooved paneling side on the outside instead of the inside just personal preference.
Well done!
Thanks!
Have you considered making a small offset box for the fire/smoke? I've tried cold smoking salmon exactly as you are doing it and even that small little smoldering bit of wood pellets made it hotter than I would like inside of my smoker box.
Are you concerned about the smoker catching fire? It takes paper 451F to ignite. Wood is much higher.
I love this idea, thanks
Really cool April! 😃👍🏻👊🏻
Looks great I like that design! That's cheese 🧀 looks great 👍👍👍
Nice build, just a thought on the vent holes, why not drill them when the sliding part is NOT in it's home position so that the vents are closed instead of open when the smoker is not in use. (basically the exact opposite of what you did)
Would this be good for a sausage smoker?
Where in the world did you get the smoky thing you put the pellets into??? You didn't explain that or link it.🙂
What was tha smoker you used?
Looks great and very fun build. I just wonder what effect the smoke will have on the wood. Maybe like whiskey barrels in the future and the wood honey might be worth watching. Great video.👍👍♥️
Won't hurt a thing