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Cold smoking developed as a practical way to preserve meat in rural households long before refrigeration existed. It allowed families to keep pork, fish, and sausages edible through winter using only salt, wood, air, and time. The system depends on separation. The fire burns away from the food, the smoke cools as it travels, and the temperature inside the smokehouse stays below 30 °C. Nothing cooks. Preservation happens slowly.
The process starts before smoking itself. Meat is first salted and air dried to reduce moisture and stabilize it. Only then does cold smoking begin, usually in short repeated sessions over days or weeks. Smoke settles gently on the surface, drying it further and adding restrained aromas from woods like beech, oak, or juniper. Afterward comes the longest stage, maturing and aging, when texture firms and flavor develops over time.
This method was widely used across Central and Eastern Europe, the Alps, and the Balkans, where winter temperatures made slow smoking possible. Cold smoked foods stay raw in structure but preserved in character. They are firm, sliceable, and quietly aromatic, made to last months rather than days.

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