Normally I would not comment about a cook do to the fact that a person might think the unit being Performance Test did some thing wrong. So I am putting the comments here, and I would like it known that the Woodwind cooked the Salmon just like I expected it to...Right!
OK, so I don't eat salmon, but I have come to believe I know how to prepare it and make it a good meal. I never cared about that white stuff, just figured it was part of the nasty meat and since I did not have to deal with it, I did not care. Then I learned this is the fat in the meat. Well, I certainly would not want to cook a beautiful rib-eye in a way that all of the delicious fat would be extruded from it! To me it was as flaky as last week, one way I know I have cooked it pretty good, but I knew that with all the fat gone from the protein, I knew it would have no flavor and was gonna require a lot of dill mayo!
I was taught that a brine would always remedy this, even if it was for only 20 minutes. This filet was brined in a 6% salt/sugar solution for 4 hours. Now I have warm smoke salmon before and don't remember the fats coming to the surface like this. I knew that the meal was going to be no where near as tasty as last weekends meal. All you have to do is look at the finished meat.
So I will stick to grilling salmon I cook for others, about a 15 minute process as opposed to "smoking" it for an hour.
For those of you that cook a lot of salmon, can you shed any light as to why the fat would have come out of it like it did being cooked the way it was?