Most of the recipes show a time of smoke, but I have not seen one that says what wood
was used.
Any suggestions?
There are quite a number of us who think that very few pellets have flavor that is distinctive enough to make any difference in the smoke taste. We say, "Smoke tastes like smoke." Mesquite apparently imparts a singular flavor, though.
EDIT:
I also hold the opinion that smoke provides both flavor and aroma to cooked food. Smoke taste doesn’t vary as much among the various smoking woods used as the aroma does. I think there's a difference in the
intensity of the flavor various woods lay down. By that I mean that an equal amount of two varieties of burned wood will deliver two different amounts of the same flavor.
My smoking wood flavor intensity scale:
5. Intense........Mesquite (very intense flavor and aroma)
4. Intense........Hickory (more intense flavor than oak, aroma may be categorized as “sharpâ€)
3. Midrange......Oak (more intense flavor than apple, aroma is more savory than sweet)
2. Light...........Apple (slightly more intense flavor than cherry, aroma is different from cherry)
1. Light...........Cherry (very light intensity, doesn’t produce as much flavor for an equal amount of wood as others, has a light sweet aroma)
Poultry.......................Use a light intensity wood (cherry, apple or peach)
Boston butt or ribs.......Use apple or peach
Beef brisket................Use oak or pecan, hickory is okay, maybe mesquite
Fish...........................Readily absorbs smoke, use cherry or peach
I don't have any experience with lamb.