ppl. a. [SMOKE sb. 1.] Dried or cured by exposure to smoke.
1653. H. Cogan, trans. Pintos Trav., lxiv. (1663), 256. Onyons and some smoak-dried flesh.
1654. H. LEstrange, Chas. I. (1655), 1178. Such a swarthy metamorphosis, as neer resembled smoke-dryed Bacon.
a. 1704. T. Brown, Walk round London, A Tavern, Wks. 1709, III. III. 3. I made my Smoak-dryd Infidel shew his Ivory Teeth.
1856. Kane, Arctic Expl., II. x. 106. Our smoke-dried cabin is a scene worth looking at.
1882. De Windt, Equator, 72. The bunch of smoke-dried human heads.
transf. 1857. Chamb. Jrnl., 17 Jan., 47/1. The smoke-dried trees of our parks.