Description
A walnut whiskey smoker turns a pour into a ritual. Load the top with wood chips. Flame them with a torch. Set the smoker over the glass. The smoke settles into the liquid for a minute or two, and the whiskey comes out with a depth it didn’t have before.
First, the build. I turn every walnut whiskey smoker on the lathe from solid black walnut, then fit a brass mesh screen across the top to hold the chips above the heat. As a result, the kit works on bourbon, scotch, rye, and the Old Fashioned. Because the whole piece is wood and brass — no plastic, no electronics, no batteries — it lives on the bar rather than in a drawer.
What makes a walnut whiskey smoker different
Most whiskey smokers sold online are stamped metal or laser-cut acrylic, finished thin and built to a price. Meanwhile, this one is turned hardwood with a brass screen — the materials that have always belonged on a bar. Most importantly, walnut is the wood of gun stocks and heirloom furniture. The colour deepens with smoke and use, so the kit you buy this year ages into the kit your grandson will inherit.
How to use one
Pile a small pinch of chips on the screen. So when you torch them, the smoke pours down through the mesh and settles over the pour. Cap the glass with the smoker for ninety seconds. Either way you drink afterwards — straight, on the rocks, in an Old Fashioned — the liquor has picked up a layer it didn’t have before.
Care, custom work, and shipping
First, wipe clean with a dry cloth after use. Second, never soak the wood or run it through the dishwasher. Finally, the walnut darkens over time — that’s the right kind of aging. Other woods turned on request: cherry, maple, padauk. Ships from Virden, Manitoba via Canada Post with tracking, typically arriving in 1–2 weeks across Canada and 2–3 weeks to the US.










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