The Collaborative International Dictionary
Smoke-dry \Smoke"-dry`\, v. t. To dry by or in smoke.
Usage examples of "smoke-dry".
Tired of biscuits and jerky, especially since she did not care for meat, Wynn had purchased dried lentils, barley, onions, and carrots, as well as late pears and smoke-dried fish.
Sally dusted the wounds with an herbal antibiotic and bandaged him up with strips of pounded bark that had been sterilized in boiling water and then smoke-dried in the fire.
A fine rain saturated the air, a solace indeed to their smoke-dried and sap-glazed skin.
Tired of biscuits and jerky, especially since she did not care for meat, Wynn had purchased dried lentils, barley, onions, and carrots, as well as late pears and smoke-dried fish.
Women smoke-dried the fish which the men scrupulously guttedthe dragging out of entrails being a male preserve, though as the men were untidier than the women a perpetual heap of stinking guts lay not far away from the huts, host to droves of flieson the other hand, maybe this kept the flies away from the huts themselves.