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  1. May 25, 2022 · Build a smokehouse: step-by-step instructions with photos. This smokehouse holds more meat and is less expensive than store-bought smokers. You can build it in a weekend for only a couple hundred dollars.

  2. Jul 23, 2020 · If you like the taste of smoked food, having your own smoker or (even better) a smokehouse will allow you to have it as often as you like. You don’t even need to buy a pricy appliance – you can make it yourself!

    • Dig the groove. The fire pit will be built downward so that the smoke can go upward.
    • A pipe should be laid out between the holes so that the smoke can travel to the meat. Cement was put in the first hole to create a floor.
    • The fire pit was built using bricks and cement.
    • A cast iron door was installed in front of the fire pit.
    • Install the posts. Start by setting over-length posts into holes dug down below the frost line, then plumb them with temporary angled braces. Cut the posts to length afterwards so the tops are all level, but don’t fill in soil around the holes just yet.
    • Secure the beams. With main posts in place, work on the beams. The plans (see page TK) show how you’ll need to cut lap joints where the beams meet in the corners.
    • Frame the roof. The plans show how 2×4 rafters and a 2×6 ridge board form the roof frame, along with angled blocking between the rafters above the walls to keep critters out.
    • Install the smoke pipe. If you’re making a separate, masonry firebox, as shown in the plans, now’s the time to bury a 6-inch concrete pipe and elbow into the ground leading into the floor of your smokehouse.
    • DIY Plans for a Traditional Walk-In Timber or Brick Smokehouse. For the skilled builder, these plans from the University of Florida date back to the 1960s.
    • DIY Idea for a Small Dedicated Cold Smoke Smokehouse. If you want a portable cold smoke wooden smokehouse, check out this idea from The Grass-fed Homestead – a wooden closet-style design with an external smoke generator that requires zero electricity or propane to do its work.
    • DIY Idea for a Neo-Classical Smokehouse. Nothing beats rough-cut lumber for creating a rustic backwoods smokehouse. Romanian woodsman (and homesteader) Cezar Machidon proves that point valiantly.
    • DIY Idea for a Timber and Concrete Smokehouse. With basic DIY skills, you can build a first-class smokehouse using poured concrete, cinderblocks, firebricks, and timber boards, just like the one by Tim Farmer’s Country Kitchen.
  3. A DIY smokehouse is a unique way to preserve your meat longer than a fridge can. Not only does it add a flavorsome edge to your cookouts, but it also offers an interesting project for food preservation. This guide will walk you through building your own and the benefits it can bring you.

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  5. Mar 24, 2020 · Smokehouse design. For the materials, I used primarily 2x2s and 'tongue and grove' boards, with 2x4s to support the roof. The wood is all pine, as that's what was readily available at Lowes/Home Depot. The ducting on the roof consists of three 4" aluminum 90-degree elbow from Home Depot.

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