This invention relates to a smoker/grill for slowly cooking food while imparting a smoked flavor to the food and more particularly to a smoker/grill with a smoke on demand system for controlling the quality of the smoke produced from fuel including wood chunks and wood chips.
Traditional smokers use a primary heat source, generally an electric heating element, to cook the food and to heat the wood chunks or wood chips to a point of combustion which causes the chucks or chips to smolder and produce smoke. On a hot day, however, the smoker will maintain temperatures such that the electric heating element will not switch on with enough frequency or duration to effectively heat the chunks or chips to the point where the chunks or chips produce smoke.
An improvement to the single heating element, and currently in the market today, is the addition of a second wood heating element to heat the wood chunks or wood chips independently from the primary heat source. This solves the problem of having to use the primary heat source to heat the wood chunks or wood chips. Once the combustion process of the wood chunks or wood chips begins, however, the wood chunks or wood chips will generally continue to smoke till the wood chunks or wood chips become ash. Such a system lacks the ability to switch the wood smoke on and off at will and to regulate the quality of the smoke produced.
Therefore, a need exists to control the temperature of the wood chunks or wood chips while they are producing smoke. Smoke that is released from wood chunks or wood chips that have just reached the smoldering point is of a different quality than wood chunks or wood chips heated past their sustained combustion point. The smoke resulting from wood chunks or wood chips being heated past their sustained combustion point is white and bitter. For most wood species, conventional research identifies the wood burning process as follows.
Stage 1—Dehydration (up to 500 F). In this stage wood must be heated from a separate heat source. The wood dries out, water steams and evaporates, and some gases like carbon dioxide are given off, but there is no flame or heat produced.
Stage 2—Pyrolysis (390 F-700 F). In this stage the wood begins to produce phenols, oily liquids, and tars. Combustion point is around 575 F
Stage 3—Smoking Sweet Spot (650-750 F). Highest concentration of phenols, oil, and tar droplets.
Stage 4—Charcoal Formation (above 1000 F). Most organic compounds have burned off
Further, different wood species have different temperatures defining at which point the wood reaches the above various stages.
In order to produce a thin sweet smoke that is typically defined as “Thin Blue Smoke” in the industry, the wood chunks or wood chips should be maintained at a temperature just below the temperature at which the wood chunks or wood chips will sustain combustion without outside heat input. Sustained combustion depends on the cold mass or volume of the wood chunks or wood chips being used for smoking. The larger the cold mass of the wood chunks or wood chips, the higher the temperature to which the wood can be heated before the wood will sustain combustion without outside heat input. Further, limiting the amount of oxygen available to the wood chunks or wood chips lowers the sustained combustion temperature. By maintaining the heat of the wood chunks or wood chips just below the sustain combustion temperature in a low oxygen environment will produce the desired sweet thin blue smoke. The smoker of the present invention produces the optimum thin blue smoke by regulating the amount of heat supplied to the wood chunks or wood chips by a wood heating element. The smoker of the present invention will work with all types of wood including wood chunks and wood chips.
In one embodiment of the smoker of the present invention, the smoker controls the temperature of the wood chunks or wood chips just below the sustain combustion temperature by placing a temperature sensor at the location of the wood chunks or wood chips being heated. A controller receives the temperature input from the temperature sensor and modulates the wood heating element to achieve a desired smoke level and quality. The smoke level and quality can be set using pre-defined smoke settings for various wood chunks or wood chips or by monitoring directly the wood smoking temperature. Customization is built into the controller to allow the user to learn which setting or temperature gives the best smoking results for the flavor (species) of wood used.
By sensing the temperature of the wood and thereby modulating the wood heating element, the wood heating element gives just enough heat to raise and maintain the wood temperature between 300° F. and 500° F. and thereby slowly release the wood oils and phenols. By maintaining the wood temperature between 300° F. and 500° F., most wood species deliver a sweet thin blue smoke.
In a second embodiment, the temperature of the wood is controlled by an on and off timing sequence of the wood heating element. For example, the controller can have a number of settings, each setting having a different on and off timing sequence. Each setting corresponds to a particular wood species and uses an on and off timing sequence to assure optimum smoke generation from the particular wood species.
In the second embodiment of the smoker the present invention, a temperature sensor functions as a limit switch to limit the temperature of the wood to 125° F. above the cabinet temperature. In operation, the controller shuts off the wood heating element once the wood temperature, monitored by the temperature sensor, exceeds the cabinet temperature by 125° F. Once the wood temperature drops to 35° F. above the cabinet temperature, the controller continues the on and off timing sequence for the wood heating element in accordance with the selected timing sequence.
Further objects, features and advantages will become apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the drawings and the appended claims.
In order to produce a sweet thin blue smoke, the wood chunks or wood chips should be maintained at a target temperature or in a range below the target temperature. For temperatures just above the target temperature, the wood chunks or wood chips will sustain combustion without added heat thereby producing smoke with undesirable flavor attributes. For temperatures within the range below and including a target temperature, the wood chunks and wood chips will produce the desired sweet thin blue smoke.
Turning to
With reference to
In order to provide smoke for the smoker 10, the smoker 10 has a smoke on demand system 33 (
The wood enclosure 34 also includes a wood support grate 54 (
The smoker 10 also includes a controller 64 (
In operation, the food products to be cooked and smoke are placed on the grill racks 26. The primary heating element 32 is energized to heat the internal volume of the cabinet 13 to cook the food product. In order to smoke the food product, wood chunks or wood chips are introduced into the enclosure 34 by means of access door 46. The wood chunks or wood chips are supported on the wood support grate 54. The wood heating element 50 is energized to heat the wood chunks or wood chips to a target range of temperatures below and including the target temperature. The target temperature is the temperature above which the wood chunks or wood chips sustain combustion without added heat. When the wood chunks and wood chips are maintained in the target temperature range for the particular wood chunks or wood chips, the wood chunks or wood chips will produce a sweet thin blue smoke.
As indicated, the target temperature range, including the target temperature, depends in part on the cold mass or volume of the wood chunks or wood chips being used for smoking. The larger the cold mass or volume of the wood chunks or wood chips, the higher the target temperature to which the wood can be heated before the wood will sustain combustion without outside heat input. The smoker of the present invention produces the optimum sweet thin blue smoke by regulating the amount of heat supplied to the wood by a wood heating element 50. The smoker of the present invention will work with all types of wood including wood chunks and wood chips.
Further, limiting the amount of oxygen available to the wood chunks or wood chips will lower the target temperature range thereby requiring less heat required to produce the sweet thin blue smoke. As previously indicated, the available combustion air results from the size of the enclosure 34, size of the smoke outlet 44, and the openings around the access door 46 and the ash pan 48. Alternatively, the enclosure 34 could be tightly sealed and a controllable damper installed to more accurately control the amount of air available in the wood enclosure 34 for producing smoke.
In a first embodiment of the smoker 10 of the present invention, the smoker 10 controls the target temperature range of the wood chunks or wood chips by placing a wood temperature sensor 52 at the location of the wood chunks or wood chips being heated. The controller 64 receives the wood temperature signal from the wood temperature sensor 52 and modulates the wood heating element 50 to achieve the desired target temperature range and therefore the desired smoke quality. Alternatively, the controller 64 can be preprogrammed for wood species and cold mass and thereby determined the target temperature range. Once the wood heating element 50 has been energized, the wood temperature sensor 52 senses the temperature of the wood and sends a wood temperature signal 68 to the controller 64. The controller 64 then modulates wood heating element so that 50 the wood heating element 50 supplies just enough heat to raise and maintain the wood temperature within the target temperature range, including the target temperature, and thereby slowly release the wood oils and phenols. The user setting signal 70 allows the user to learn which setting or temperature range gives the best smoking results for the species of wood used.
In a second embodiment, the temperature of the wood chunks or wood chips is controlled by an on and off timing sequence of the wood heating element 50. For example, the controller 64 can have a number of settings, each setting having a different on and off timing. Each setting corresponds to a particular wood species and uses an on and off timing sequence to assure optimum smoke generation from the particular wood species and cold mass. As an example, a smoker 10 of the present invention can have five settings set forth below:
S1:
S2:
S3:
S4:
S5:
The timing sequences (S1-S5) and results are illustrated in
In the second embodiment of the smoker 10 of the present invention, the wood temperature sensor 52 in combination with the controller 64 functions as a limit switch to limit the temperature of the wood chunks or wood chips to 125° F. above the cabinet temperature as determined by the cabinet temperature sensor 31. In operation, the controller 64 shuts off the wood heating element 50 once the wood temperature, monitored by the wood temperature sensor 52, exceeds the cabinet temperature by 125° F. Once the wood temperature drops to 35° F. above the cabinet temperature, the controller 64 continues the on and off timing sequence of the wood heating element 50 in accordance with the selected user setting.
While this invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that variations and modifications can be affected within the spirit and scope of the invention as described herein and as described in the appended claims.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/660,585, filed on Apr. 20, 2018, which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62660585 | Apr 2018 | US |