A pellet grill was my introduction to smoking. I had done some burning of herbs, such as rosemary, or wood chips on my Weber, but for the most part, I preferred the taste of a well seasoned grill. I have been reviewing some posts regarding flavor differences between different woods. I have also reviewed articles on the subject. It seems that there is a general consensus that the woods taste pretty much the same when in pellet form. My question is whether the flavor differences that I read about are present when cooking directly with wood. There are charts (I have one on my refrigerator) that describe what foods are best with each wood. What brought this to mind is that I could not get more of the pellets I normally use due to the lockdown. I had settled on two, both GMG products: Fruitwood blend for general use, and Texas blend when I want a more smokey flavor. The difference, in this case, is the amount of smokiness. I am not sure if there is a flavor difference since more smokey tastes different than less smokey. When wood burns you create a lot of organics, such as aldehydes and ketones. These organics are where the flavor comes from. It makes sense that the organics that you get from different woods would not be the same, so it is not unreasonable to think that there would be a flavor difference.
Anyway, I have a couple of bags of GMC Fruitwood, which is cherry, pecan, beech and oak), on order along with a bag of a Traeger Signature Blend which is hickory, maple and cherry. I brought some single flavor bags of Traeger pellets: pecan, cherry and oak. I may blend them to get what I am used to using. I am wondering if anyone has a better idea.