Top 5 Woods for Barbecuing
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What’s your ideal moisture percentage content? 👍🏼🔥🇺🇸
@@jeans3490 He has a really good video that explains all of the science behind that. Check it out on his page. If I remember right it's 18 to 22 percent.
Would love to get you some Australian wood like red gum, jam wood, or Aussie oak! Also, have you tried olive wood?
Thank you!
@Mad Scientist BBQ You are all wrong my brother, Almond Wood is hands down the bet Wood for BBQing, It's not even close
The aroma of burning pecan is simply incredible.
I've always heard great things about pecan, but never tried it. I'm going have to buy some from the big box store I guess just to see what I'm missing. It's hard for me to spend that kind of money because I live where hickory, oak, and such are so plentiful, matter of fact, I just finish processing and storying about 3 cords of black cherry. but I just gotta try pecan.
@@Moonshinedave1 it has a wonderful sweetness to it like a dessert, you’ll love it
@@Moonshinedave1 yeah man treat yourself. Pecan smells up my entire backyard and smells heavenly
I agree. It’s an incredible smell.
Pecan is a type of hickory.
Not saying this is perfect but, the way I was taught about BBQ fire wood choice is that there are two categories: Fruit woods and Nut woods. Lighter foods like fish or chicken use Fruit woods, Heavier foods like beef or pork use Nut woods. 60-40% combinations are ok too.
Loving the list format recently. I feel like I have watched you so long that I know where you are going before you get there! Keep up the great content!
I love this channel!! Mr Yoder you have so helped me with bbq and my friends and family are great full!
White oak is and always will be my #1. Great video bruh!
I've just got into smoking and you've been a huge help for me. Cheers mate. Love from Australia 💨👌🍺
Had a friend, who's a wood worker, ask me my favorite wood. I told him for poultry I love cherry and for red meat either hickory or pecan. Pecan being similar to hickory but I told him that it's a little more mild and rounder with a nutty flavor. His response provoked an argument from me until I did research and found he was mostly right. He said "well not surprising since they are the same wood." I mocked him and he rolled his eyes. But once I did the research, I learned that pecan and hickory come from the same family of trees. And hickory trees have nuts as well. I had to take back my argument. But I love pecan! Thank you for the video!
I live in Northern Thailand. We have so many different varieties of fruit trees here in the sub-tropics it's not even funny, but the one wood here in Southeast Asia that is considered the Hickory of SEA is Lamyai. Will have to report back on the results.
Thank you, Jeremy. Love your content.
Excellent video! Love the honesty and great explanation!! Subscribed!!
Love pecan! Was watching your video because I was wondering about oak which I have tons of. Got my answer to try it! Thanks!
Mesquite is by far my favorite. I love that smell and flavor it gives. I have access to so much free mesquite so really like it or not it’s not much of a choice haha. More prominent in my area than any other woods
Hell yea same here
@@boujiatexas1870 Texas fam for life ❤️
Is mesquite too strong of a smoke flavor? I just bought some mesquite wood and I want to use it on some briskets I'm planning on smoking labor day weekend. It'll be my first time using mesquite.
I've eaten a lot of mesquite smoked brisket my uncle in San Antonio cooked on those cheap oil barrel cookers and it was always delicious. He'd trim the mesquite around his property and stack those small twigs to dry and use them for smoking.
Post oak is where it’s at here in San Antonio tx
In Florida, what is post oak and can I get some here?
@@robertper4102 Many oak tree species are protected in the state of Florida. Contact a local arborist for a good and legal substitute.
I'm hr south of San Antonio. No post oak here. Plenty of Live oak. Don't recall seeing post oak there, but that's probably around the line where it starts growing. Never been a fan. Mesquite is my favorite.
A lot of live oak and mesquite in San Antonio
Another awesome video. I know we are generally talking about meats and hardwood for slow smoking... but I really enjoy BBQing salmon over oak, but placed on a water soaked cedar plank over direct heat for an incredible smoke flavor. Very fast and delicious cook.
Great videos Bro I love your channel, please keep pumping them out, thanks
In Mississippi there are a ton of deer processing businesses. Smoked sausage is usually a favorite choice of most clients.There is one guy who smokes his with just pecan and you are right it is the best. It is my favorite as well and ribs with a mix of cherry , pecan and ole hick is my go to. I have a bunch oh mesquite and now I know what to use it for. Thanks for that.
Great video Jeremy! I love to use oak wood for my smoker that I built myself.
Pecan is my #1 go to wood as well. I also like to burn mesquite with my Santa Maria grill. Good video!
Smoke is just another a spice. One ingredient of many. Doesn't take much to get great barbecue.
I have split cherry and maple in my garage right now. I’ve used it a ton, mainly because it was what was available when I first got my smoker. I also like to use chunks of hickory or apple when I’m smoking meats.
I agree, pecan is my favorite as well.
I use a mequite and oak mix. Love it. Works on all meats.
White oak and cherry are my favorites...no pecan around here in New England. Always enjoy your vids, long time first time.
Oak with Pacan mix is the best! From South Texas!
Great Video! I’ve been trying to hunt down some Oak and its been tough. Now I know Pecan/Hickory will do just fine.
I'm getting Oak for my next 1/4 cord, but I've found Almond wood to be my favorite. It creates a color similar to Cherry, but with more smoke flavor. Good point about all wood being fine if you run a clean fire. I've even found Mesquite to be fine with a hot and fast 325+ cook.
80 elk passed through my farm the other day, sheep were curious, got some great photos of them against the mountains. Your advice is invaluable for my first hams and bacons raised here on a our place, they deserve good treatment to honour their lives. Thank you for your help in making that happen with great smoking advice!
I'm pretty sure it was 82 elk
I live in the southern of Mexico. Around from where I live there isn't many options. The best I can get around here is oak, peach and apple. Mesquite, pecan and cherry are pretty much impossible to get. Btw, in this part of Mexico mesquite is incredibly used for making charcoal.
Great stuff!
great info. Thanks
Here in San Antonio we use both post oak and mesquite . Mesquite gets a bad wrap but we love it here brutha Puro South Texas Style !
Thanks for the info! Clean fire is the key just as you say; the type of wood isn't half as important as that in my experience (FWIW I use pecan/mesquite when trying to impress, oak when I just want to cook).
A hurricane where I lived about 20 years ago uprooted a lot of pecan trees. I had so much I used it for everything! Grilling, smoking, it quickly became my favorite.
Bud.. I think it really break down to clean some up here in the northwest i used maple and alder.. but I really do appreciate you educational point of view.. thank you
Perfect bro really on point
This was a great video. Very informative and to the point. I will say though that a lot of this comes down to personal preference. I grew up with my dad cooking everything (a lot of brisket and ribs) on only mesquite because that’s what we could cut ourselves at the deer lease. That heavy smoke flavor became what I expect from barbecue and that’s what I enjoy. There’s not a right or wrong wood. Just try different things and find what works for you
Being in Canada I thankfully have access to lots of maple sugar trees. I find it's amazing when mixed with hickory.
I just started smoking on the Weber kettle using maple grown on our property 🇨🇦
Helpful! Thank you.
I’ve never used pecan, thanks for the reco Jeremy!
I used 2/4 lumber and it taste good !!
Great video!
Local wood here in SE QLD, Australia for smoking is Ironbark - comes from the eucalyptus tree - amazing flavour profile, very robust, burns very hot and long, try it out if you get a chance. Also has the coolest name of any hard wood for BBQ haha. The top end restaurants also use it to burn down and pair with apple wood for grilling steaks.
We had a big ice storm in Oklahoma a few years ago and a giant pecan tree in my backyard got destroyed. Cleaning up the fallen branches I decided to save a bit for my fire pit. I got into bbq like a year later and was pleasantly surprised to learn pecan is excellent for smoking meat. We like the flavor so much that its not used for the fire pit anymore and I cherish every piece.
My neighbor to the south. I'm sure you have plenty of silver maples around you. Use that to burn in your fire pit. It's sweet, and safe to use for cooking.
I'm not a huge fan of pecan but I have tons of pecan trees around my house.
My dad used fresh pecan limbs with the leaves on for pork and chicken. He would start and finish with them and nothing in middle of cook. Fabulous! I have tried lots of different but keep going back to dad’s standby many times.
I started smoking with fresh hickory limbs. The flavor is unbelievable. My roommate got me hooked on smoking when I was 21 and that;s what he used. I'd like to try some fresh pecan. Just need to find a tree :).
@@USA__2023 you can get some pecans and plant it, when it sprouts just let it get 4’ and cut off what you need. They grow fast but you can keep it as a bush just for fresh smoking. What I did.
I agree 100% with your ranking!!
Love the color cherry gives. I love pecan also and have used it extensively. Sometimes a fire is too clean and the meat needs a little bit of a dirty fire to give it some smoky flavor. I prefer oak for that.
@Scriptures Only Interesting. I haven't had that experience, but thanks for sharing. Follow me on IG at daviddanbbq
Here in NC, we a lot of different woods..i love it.
I was practically born & raised on mesquite wood. It is fantastic on steaks, poppers, chicken and jerkey but I do prefer pecan for brisket and hickory for pork
My Dad always said, the best smoke comes from the bark .Have you ever heard that. My Dad cooked ribs and Boston butts on an open cider block pit using green hardwood fresh from the sawmill.
Thank you!!
Love your videos and have learned so much about bbq from you.
#1 Mesquite for brisket, beef ribs and steaks going to try it for my next pork butt too. Currently smoking a brisket on my Treager using super smoke in -32c with a windchill of -42c, my Treager is keeping the temperature +/- 5°F. Love the strong smoke flavor of mesquite. I got hooked on brisket in Phoenix at Bobby q, they use mesquite with maybe some almond. My last brisket tasted identical, I was in heaven!
#2 Hickory/Pecan for pork butt and pork ribs and veggies, Hickory is great for corn.
I've tried apple but not strong enough flavor, haven't been able to get oak yet but will try it when I can. I want to do chicken wings next and debating which wood I'm going to use
I can’t remember ever experiencing pecan wood smoked barbecue.... my mouths watering now talking about all this barbecue.
I live in Pennsylvania and I love mesquite so dang much that I pay really good money to have it shipped ¼ cord pallets at a time! I can definitely agree that it is the best out of all of them for direct heat grilling, but for my preference I like it for slow smoking also. I love that in your face smoke flavor. Hickory and oak are a second favorite just because of its abundance where I live.
Pecan/cherry/Apple is spot on for any pork IMO...Love my mesquite/hickory for beef though. Just me. I like a strong smoke on beef.
Agree 100%. Still pretty new to smoking, just bought Brazos about a month ago. Pecan hands down best all around. You can tell too because I can’t find any right now.
I’ve tried a lot of different woods. Coastal dark red oak with the thick bark is amazing
If you get the opportunity, I suggest locating some wild persimmon. Fantastic either alone, or with oak.
Personal favorites of mine come from the Central Coast of Ca, Red Oak and Almond Wood from central valley
In Finland we use alder its very good!!
Grew up on mesquite here in south Texas but now that I'm older and cook my own bbq I really like hickory or oak for long cooks mesquite strictly for grilling
Had to remove a large mulberry limb last year. Just used some as a test to smoke a pork shoulder. It doesn't burn very hot, but the flavor was very nice. Very thin smoke ring was probably due to the temp. Next time I'll either mix in some pecan, or add coals.
Here in Florida we get everything as far as cooking wood. Hickory and oak grows everywhere and citrus woods are good too.
thank you
Some good info, thanks for sharing. I have never tried pecan, but may have to give it a go. Thanks!
You will really like pecan I bet.
@@tm71100 I'll be sure to check it out.
Oak is my go to
I absolutely love Cherry on Pork and Poultry.
Great video Jeremy! I would have left Mesquite out due to it being great for grilling. And it was suppose to be about BBQ woods. That said, I hope you are developing some classes for skill share also. You’re a great teacher! Love the list idea. Grades of meat would be good. Would love to see you use more choice and a bit of select to show people it can be done with that also.
I agree, pecan is my favorite, surprised Maple wasn't in there
My favorite are hickory and pecan together. Cant go wrong with either.
I do this for my pork shoulders, comes out amazing every time.
I do oak and pecan mix...sometimes I'll throw in a piece or 2 of mesquite as well.
Do you put them in there together or one at a time? I’m really new to smoking and trying get a feel for what’s correct.
@@crbcyouthman I Normally start with Hickory and once the fire bed is good and hot then i will add the pecan. from this point depending on the cook time I will add together.
I like to use maple wood when smoking meat it gives a hint of sweet flavor and goes very well with every piece of meat. I got a lot of maple trees where I live, so I use it because it is what is available and it is fantastic.
I agree. Canada in the (not exclusive) land of maple and they grow invasively with storms of helicopter like samaras. Save for this bad manner, the maple wood make a great mild smoke for pork ribs.
Lot of Maple here in MN too. I like it more for grilling on coals and open fire cooking. But do agree with your comment about the flavor. I have just never tried to smoke anything with it.
im jealous...maple wood is wonderful
Here in Québec i use Maple all the Time.
Is it a y body using yellow birch ?
I'm from South Texas with also a ton of family from Northern Mexico. Personally for our family Mesquite is just the way. There isn't a better reminder of home then the smell of burning Mesquite. 🙂 🇨🇱🍻🇲🇽
That's all I use here in the valley, puro mesquite no ay mas!!
Here in the Central Valley of California we use almond wood. Its great for grilling and so so for smoking. Very mild not strong like hickory/mesquite. We also have apple, walnut, cherry, olive etc.....
I'm also in Central Valley CA, and have been looking for woods to up my game. I just got some manzanita to try
I'm 22 and got into smoking last year grew up in the south west so I'm used to the mesquite wood which I love but lately been trying to broaden my horizons with different woods
Love this list. It's spot on. I prefer Pecan for beef, and apple or cherry for pork, but will use pecan if cooking both at the same time. Another trick I use is I get my coal bed going then add mesquite for the first hour or so of the smoke, then go back to pecan. I call it a "mesquite kiss" and it adds a nice, subtle little flavor profile. Also, if I'm reverse searing some beef like a big steak or tri tip or even smoking a prime rib, I smoke it over pecan and finish sear it on a bed of mesquite coals. I haven't cooked with oak much, but will start in a few months because I had a huge pin oak tree fall in my backyard, so I have a ton of firewood.
Thank you for this great videos. What do you think about almond for beef specifically brisket ?
Love the channel! Very informative. Keep up the great work.
Have (2) questions, what would you say is the right moisture content for the wood?
What are your thoughts on a fully insulated fire box? I working on designing an offset and was thinking about using a double wall fire box with insulation all the way around except on the door of course. Any thoughts would be appreciated!
I use pecan for brisket
Hickory and apple for ribs and pulled pork
Hickory and cherry for ribs
I haven't used oak yet. I want to try post oak on my next brisket. I use a Weber smokey mountain 22" which has been a great smoker for me. I can use the nice chunks of wood in a bag so I have access to every kind of wood you mentioned plus a few more to include apple and peach.I have never tried smoking chicken or fish yet haven't worked myself up to it.
I also prefer Pecan. I use Oak as well, but once my current supply has been exhausted, I'll primarily use Pecan. I really love the flavor of Mesquite, but also in strict moderation... Great video, thanks for the list.
Thanks for the explanation! I recently smoked ribs using only cherry wood for the first time, I agree the flavour was so subtle I couldn’t really taste much. Next time I’ll include something else to up the smoke flavour!
I’ve noticed the same thing with not only cherry but with peach. I’m almost out of hickory so all I used was peach and cherry for some no wrap pork ribs yesterday on my offset. Even my wife said they didn’t have the smoke flavor as usual. I have no idea why so many think that fruit woods are so special.
I think most/all fruit woods are similar in this aspect. Not much smoke flavor added to the meat. I think that's why most smoked and cured meets like bacon use apple wood so it doesn't over power the meat flavor.
You can always mix in a little mesquite or hickory to get the stronger smoke flavor you're looking for.
I use all of these but mostly oak and throw in the others for their different properties. I've been using sasafras a lot lately it gives a very subtle root beer after taste, I highly recommend giving it a try
I’ve cooked with mainly oak I live in Florida and that’s the most common tree available but I do have a pecan tree I’m going to cut down over the winter so it can start seasoning
Hickory or pecan are my choices for beef. For pork I like cherry or maple. Because mesquite is so strong, I only use that for very short smokes such as chicken wings or steaks.
I started with pecan because there's so many pecan farms around my area and a farmer gives me the wood . Me and my family love the taste but quite frankly I don't stray from pecan. I have smoked with other woods except Mesquite which is weird because there's Mesquite trees all over our desert and we could just go get as much as we'd like and don't. Thanks Jeremy if it wasn't for your videos I don't know what kind of smoking I would be doing since your videos were the ones that I started watching right from the beginning which was this past May 2021so I'm definitely a rookie
Post oak for me but I'm in central Texas where there's an abundance of it and it's not expensive to have delivered. Then I like Pecan and Hickory equally. Pecan is easier and less expensive here as a rule. Lately I've been using quite a lot of fruit woods like Apple and Cherry and even Maple and like them quite a bit. I also used to live in South Texas where Mesquite was plentiful and what most people used but today I'll only use Mesquite if it's all that I have. But the truth is, as long as you manage your smoke and don't overwhelm the meat with it, pretty much any hardwood will work just fine. People get too caught up in what wood for what meat and it simply isn't that big of a deal. No matter what wood you use, if you manage your fire it'll taste awesome and nobody can taste your meat and tell that you used any certain wood, well, except for Mesquite. Mesquite is very distinctive. But folks should seriously stop worrying about what wood they should be using. Use whatever is available and manage your fire well and you'll have great tasting meat. IMNSHO
I've always preferred a 60/40 mix of either hickory and alder wood or apple and alder wood myself for pork. I have an 11.5lb brisket going on tonight and she's getting 100% oak since my rub is slightly sweet. I would like to add that your wood should either compliment or alter your taste based upon your desired outcome. For example....you bought a new rub to try and once you get home and taste test it you decide that it's slightly too sweet. Then definitely don't use a wood that adds sweetness to the flavor but rather one that would help reduce it slightly if you want to. Thanks for the great videos.
I like Hickory and Apple in the Bar-B. I cook out often. Most say Hickory is too strong but i was the one who was doing all the eating so the strong taste i can have it i like it especially over drummettes and flats on chicken wings. I cooked some today. I just put a few small sticks of hickory over my charcoal and cook on a slow simmer for like 3 hours on those bbq wings.
That's great news! I've got tons of pecan here in Georgia.
I like using a cherry and hickory mix
In the NW, alder is popular. It's mild and good flavored. Whatever wood you use, use splits rather than small rounds (branches) because you do not want the bark. Splits also burn faster and cleaner. Apple is similar to mesquite. It's easy to overdo the smoke flavor, but it tastes great.
Pecan (flavor) and cherry (color) has been my fave combination. I cut my teeth on offsets and post-oak back home in TX, but that combo (which I've learned living in VA for 15 years now) has been amazing.
Nice videos!
Same here! I use that combo on my BGE and have NEVER been disappointed.
Pecan, cherry and post oak!!! Got that blend from B&B
Pecan and cherry are heaven
@@MostlyCloudy That sounds like a great combination.
@@brianmiller1098 I bet that gives off some amazing flavor.
You got me I'm a Fan now. I liked, subscribed and I turn those notifications on. I am 60 and been cooking all my life. You are absolutely correct about the information you just.put out there. Therefore I'm a True Fan. I'll back you 1000%. I build a BBQ Pit when I was 17 years.old. I could put 52 halves of chicken on it. I still cook on that same pit today. That's some good Ole Southern Cooking here in Georgia. We also cook out Turkey in the Ground. Been doing it like that I'd say 40+ years. No Turkey better than that. Dig a hole line it with Coal. Build a fire. Season Turkey. Wrap in several layers.of foil. Soak a sheet in Bathtub. Ring it out. Wrap Turkey with wet sheet. Put a wire coat hanger around legs. Lower it into hole with hanger out of ground. Cover with Dirt. Let cook til next day. Start to uncover Turkey and pull hanger to bring it up. Best Turkey you'll ever put in your mouth. Happy Eating
I like to use bamboo it gives it a tropical flavor. Try it works great
I agree with this list.
Mesquite and brisket are the best to me.. Half and half red oak and pecan for pork... Great combo if you don't have hickory
My fave is plum. You can get similar with a cherry hickory mix. Not the easiest to come buy but it's my favorite on pork.
I did a brisket with black cherry wood........the best brisket Ive ever done.....love the flavor that black cherry provides....found a lady on Facebook giving the black cherry wood away for free......gold mine!
I have smoked many great flavored briskets with mesquite and lump charcoal in a Klose 20x48 offset smoker. I would not recommend smoking 18-20 hours with straight mesquite, but with the addition of the charcoal, especially after 6 hours or so you get a great flavor. I saw a youtube video sponsored by HEB stores where the cook switched from straight mesquite to straight post oak in the later part of the cook. I may try that some day.
Great information for folks starting out.I’ve been doing it for a while now . Made the over smoked mistakes, you learn quickly as meat isn’t cheap. For me I kinda stay away from mesquite. Might use it to start a log fire but I prefer oak/ hickory/pecan to cook with. Good luck everyone.👍
Ha! That's great, I arrived at the same conclusion, pecan is my #1 too!!