Ingredients
• 1.8 kg (4 lb) fresh sockeye salmon (approximate)
• Meat cure 450 g (1 lb) salt,
125 g (4 oz) white sugar
Preparation
Fillet two salmon so you have four fillets. Cut into sizes to fit on Bradley
Smoker racks. Leaving the skin on, sprinkle a coat of meat cure on the flesh
side of salmon. The cure should be heavier on the thicker portion of the
salmon, thinner as you get closer to the tail. Save your extra meat cure for
another day. Stack the salmon in a deep tray flesh to flesh and store in a
cool covered place for 24 hours. Remove and rinse with cold water any access
meat cure. Pat dry and allow the salmon to dry further in a cold,
well-ventilated place. You may need a fan to blow cool air over the fish and
the fish should be dry and tacky to the touch. This process may take another
24 hours to accomplish.
Smoking Method
Using Alder flavour bisquettes, place salmon in the Bradley Smoker with the
damper wide open and start the smoking process, watching that temperature
does not rise much over 50°C (100°F). The smoking time may very from 4 to 8
hours depending on taste. This recipe and all cold smoking process recipes
are best done in winter when the temperature is cold and the air is dry.
To Serve
Serve your cold smoke salmon as appetizer on a small pancake with cream
cheese and capers, or blend with sour cream for a dip.