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User Guidelines and Instructions => Guide to Smoking Times, Temps, Woods => Topic started by: MyOwnIdaho on March 09, 2018, 06:44:45 PM

Title: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: MyOwnIdaho on March 09, 2018, 06:44:45 PM
I have a bunch of pucks left over from my now defunct Bradley and I was wondering if anyone has an idea of how to use them. My thought was to stack them two high and place on foil. Thoughts? Suggested quantities?

Title: Re: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: SuperDave on March 09, 2018, 07:33:39 PM
begging for experimentation.  I would just run some dry runs in the empty smoker and see how they burn.  Start with a 1 hour test and an hour and a half or 2 hour test. 
Title: Re: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: SconnieQ on March 10, 2018, 06:43:38 AM
This question has definitely come up before, but I don't recall anyone ever posting their results on how the pucks actually worked. Maybe there is someone around who has already tried using them. I wouldn't stack them. Try just laying them in the smoke box down the middle not directly over a hole, and see if they combust. If they do, then try lining the smoke box with foil.
Title: Re: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: DivotMaker on March 12, 2018, 08:37:00 PM
...What they said!  It's expensive wood, so do what you can to see if it works!  You also might wrap the bottom of the puck in foil, if it catches fire on you.
Title: Re: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: MyOwnIdaho on April 03, 2018, 09:20:22 PM
Okay, the leftover Bradley pucks are superb for lower temperature smoking. I did a batch of jerky this weekend. I put three pucks on foil and the first step was two hours at 100 to dry the meat. The pucks burned up on the initial heating. I then used four pucks stacked two high on foil when I was at 140. I had great smoke for about three hours. Best smoke on jerky to date.

Title: Re: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: azbohunter on April 04, 2018, 01:01:20 PM
Okay, the leftover Bradley pucks are superb for lower temperature smoking. I did a batch of jerky this weekend. I put three pucks on foil and the first step was two hours at 100 to dry the meat. The pucks burned up on the initial heating. I then used four pucks stacked two high on foil when I was at 140. I had great smoke for about three hours. Best smoke on jerky to date.
Those are the same temps that I like to use for fish! Did the pucks burning at 100 degrees spike your temps?
Title: Re: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: MyOwnIdaho on April 04, 2018, 07:04:20 PM
No. They didn't actually catch fire but when I looked at them when I bumped the temperature up after a couple hours, they were already ash, and there had only been visible smoke for a short time. The next time around, I'll put the pucks in after the first bump in temperature.
Title: Re: Using Bradley pucks
Post by: old sarge on April 04, 2018, 07:51:25 PM
And now we know!  Thanks.