I've never burned it but a few months ago a neighbor took a section off his and I have around 20 splits. Can't wait to smoke a brisket!! Need to think about the spices that will make the sauce to compliment the apple smoke
Intheswamp said:Splitting apple is easy. I can hand split a round of some of my well seasoned apple in less than a minute...of course the splits end up only about 3-4 inches long... for the grill.
hareball said:I've never burned it but a few months ago a neighbor took a section off his and I have around 20 splits. Can't wait to smoke a brisket!! Need to think about the spices that will make the sauce to compliment the apple smoke
Let me know if you succeed growing the Osage Orange, I'd have to make a special trip across the pond to see it burning! :lol:woodchip said:Brilliant link.........
Must try to get some Osage Orange growing here, now that would be a nice change from our local trees and shrubs![]()
termv said:Saw a Craigs list listing - Triaxle of apple wood for $300 in misc. lengths.
woodchip said:pen said:However, I haven't burnt a bit of it through the wood stove. I save it for the burn pit.
Same here, I save all my orchard prunings for the fire pit as pork cooked over applewood is the best way to cook pork.
If you want a great steak, try grape vine prunings if you can get them![]()
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pen said:yep, nothing wrong with it at all. However, I haven't burnt a bit of it through the wood stove. I save it for the burn pit. Reason for this is I find nothing better than throwing a grate over some apple wood and apple wood coals then plopping a couple of 2 inch thick steaks on top. Yep, I'll save it for that!
pen
NH_Wood said:+1 - very high BTU wood. The only problem is getting much of it! I've heard it's nasty to split, and, seeing that most are pretty gnarly looking trees, I believe it! Cheers!Troutchaser said:apple wood rates very high on the BTU chart. Better or equal to oak if I remember right.
KeepWarmInWinter said:From this thread, it seems that we are pretty lucky. We cleaned up our friend’s yard from three years old apple tree rounds.
My husband split rounds by hand. Few trips with our Subaru Outback and we have gotten about one cord of excellent firewood.
This is our first season of burning wood in a wood insert. Buying and installing insert is not easy, but getting good seasoned firewood in the November is a real challenge. We use this wood wisely – for coolest days, big rounds for overnight burning, small splits or rounds as helpers for other firewood. Now, I am learning that we should save it for BBQ as well.![]()
As per Clydesdale owner’s manual, apple firewood (26.5 MBTU) is better than white oak (25.7 MBTU).
FYI.
Firewood rating, organized by species region (Western, Eastern) and type (hardwood, softwood):
http://worldforestindustries.com/forest-biofuel/firewood/firewood-btu-ratings/
Firewood rating and guide (heat output, easy to burn, easy to split, heavy smoke, sparks):
http://www.thelograck.com/firewood_rating_chart.html
This site rates the apple tree firewood only as fair. ???
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