Making Cake with Shake that Ash method

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ParkitoATL

Can't Leave
Mar 11, 2023
422
1,527
Atlanta, GA
So, when doing the Cake Maker "shake that ash" method (stir the ash, place thumb over bowl, then shake), do you avoid cleaning the bowl for some time while the cake develops? Or do you let it sit, then lightly clean before the next bowl?

I've started leaving the ash and packing the next bowl on top. It doesn't have a foul smell. Just wondering how the pros do it.
 
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warren99

Lifer
Aug 16, 2010
2,898
35,634
California
I've never tried it your way. I build up a cake the traditional way. I fill the bowl up 1/3 of the way for a few smokes, then 2/3 for a few smokes, then all the way. It eventually makes a nice even cake.
 
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Mortamyhr

Part of the Furniture Now
Jan 5, 2023
530
1,386
Nashville, TN
Want sure where this was going with that title🤣

I really have no room to give advice on this, but: i tried that method once and noticed the cake seemed to be very flaky, even with only a thin-ish layer. Now I brush out the chamber with a folded over pipe cleaner after every smoke. I don’t want/need thick cake(In my pipes at least) but I know others swear by it.

Thanks for the laugh! Keep shakin that ash. Or don’t. It’s whatever.
 

warren

Lifer
Sep 13, 2013
12,883
20,513
Foothills of the Chugach Range, AK
I find cake forms naturally in my briars. Never had to encourage it, only work to keep it thin. A lot of memers detest any cake. Some tolerate only as a thin coating. But, I've never heard, other than the honey lovers, of encouraging cake, only keeping it under control depending on the smoker's preference. Then there are the various manufacturers who use coatings to encourage "breaking in" the pipe. I've never found or heard a definition of "breaking in". I presume most every smoker knows when his pipe is satisfactorily broken per their own definition.
 

yanoJL

Lifer
Oct 21, 2022
1,403
3,659
Pismo Beach, California
...Now I brush out the chamber with a folded over pipe cleaner after every smoke. I don’t want/need thick cake(In my pipes at least) but I know others swear by it.

Same. Once I started reading about reaming and cutting back cake, I kinda latched into the idea that prevention would be the best course of action for me. I'm not looking forward to having to take a tool to the inside of a pipe to maintain it.
I shouldn't be trusted with sharp metal objects; even under close adult supervision.
 

Mortamyhr

Part of the Furniture Now
Jan 5, 2023
530
1,386
Nashville, TN
Same. Once I started reading about reaming and cutting back cake, I kinda latched into the idea that prevention would be the best course of action for me. I'm not looking forward to having to take a tool to the inside of a pipe to maintain it.
I shouldn't be trusted with sharp metal objects; even under close adult supervision.
Exactly!
 
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anotherbob

Lifer
Mar 30, 2019
18,461
33,577
47
Central PA a.k.a. State College
it must work for somebody. But like most here I feel cake happens. A lot of these old techniques come from the fact that there was a higher demand for briar which meant lower grades with a better chance of flaws ended up being made into pipes more often. If a pipe has certain flaws which can still happen but are far less likely an even cake can prevent those flaws from causing critical damage to a pipe. Or at least that is what I believe based mostly on wild guesses.
 

Mr_houston

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 30, 2020
652
5,538
Texas
Crush the ash into powder. Shake it with top covered. Dump and leave the bowl as is until next smoke. Repeat.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
23,053
58,925
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
I don't do the "shake the ash" metod of building a cake. In my experience it forms a thoroughly inferior type of cake, soft, impregnated with left over bits of tobacco, one prone to breaking apart. I prefer a hard carbon insulator which can be built up over time by wiping the chamber walls with a wad of toweling after every smoke. A thin hard coating will build up, one that does the job well and is long lasting.
 

ParkitoATL

Can't Leave
Mar 11, 2023
422
1,527
Atlanta, GA
I don't do the "shake the ash" metod of building a cake. In my experience it forms a thoroughly inferior type of cake, soft, impregnated with left over bits of tobacco, one prone to breaking apart. I prefer a hard carbon insulator which can be built up over time by wiping the chamber walls with a wad of toweling after every smoke. A thin hard coating will build up, one that does the job well and is long lasting.
I was doing the towel cleaning for a while, it just seemed like the heel remained bare, despite 20+ smokes. Do I just need to be patient?
 
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Feb 12, 2022
3,710
53,092
33
North Georgia mountains.
I don't know that I would pack a fresh bowl on top of ash. Just smoke a fresh bowl all the way to the bottom. Pack it half way if need be.
Smoke from the new bowl will pass through the ash on its way to the draft hole - that can't taste good.
 
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sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
23,053
58,925
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
I was doing the towel cleaning for a while, it just seemed like the heel remained bare, despite 20+ smokes. Do I just need to be patient?
Just be patient. The time it takes is worth it. In the meantime you can practice slow and cool smoking while the layer forms. It's kind of a win/win.