Chef Tom fires up the Yoder Smokers Flat-Top Charcoal Grill for a rundown on how to smoke Barbecue Pork Spare Ribs over indirect heat in a charcoal grill.
Looking for some cold weather comfort food? Chef Tom's got you covered with his Smoked Pork Ragu. Boston Butt pork shoulder smoked on the Yoder Smokers YS640s Pellet Grill, then braised in a rich San Marzano tomato sauce and served on a bed of pappardelle pasta!
Chef Tom fires up the Yoder Smokers YS640s Pellet Grill to smoke a delicious KC Cattle Company whole wagyu brisket. For this cook we let the brisket smoke open and unwrapped from start to finish, creating an impressive bark and smoke ring. Couple this technique with the injection and the fat content of the wagyu brisket and you get a juicy brisket with incredible texture and flavor with very little effort!
If you're looking for tasty barbecue burnt ends without buying a whole brisket or paying a premium for a brisket point, then look no further. In this video Chef Tom smokes up a beef chuck roast and turns it into Poor Man's Burnt Ends.
Living in a post-COVID world, Chef Britt recreates one of her favorite fair foods: Smoked Turkey Legs. She gets the Yoder Smokers Wichita Loaded Offset fired up and shows you how it’s done.
Bacon & Onion Flatbread: also known as Flammkuchen, Tarte Flambee, or Alsatian Pizza. Chef Britt shares a slice of Alsace with this ultra-thin flatbread fired on the Gozney Roccbox!
Chef Britt shows you how to make Curry Cauliflower Soup the ATBBQ way! Elevated with char, smoke, and amazing curry flavors! It’s all blended together with the power of the Vitamix A2500 Ascent Series Blender.
Chef Britt shares one of her most popular recipes: smoked pecan sandies! First she cold smokes pecans before mixing them into a buttery shortbread and then rolls them in smoked maple turbinado sugar! Perfect for sharing with loved ones!
Chef Britt shows us a new side to bring to the holiday table: Barbecue Smoked Carrots! They get roasted on the grill in a spicy and sweet glaze, and served with a cool yogurt sauce and herbaceous parsley pesto!
There are a number of ways to smoke salmon. You may be familiar with the fully cured smoked salmon, like lox, that you find on bagels or cured platters. It’s dense, often salty and fully cured and safe to eat without cooking with heat. There is also the option of hot smoking fresh salmon with little more than seasoning on the surface of the fish to affect the final product. This recipe, however, lives somewhere in between. By giving the salmon a quick cure, you can force flavors into the flesh while pulling some of the water out and concentrating the flavors. The fish is not fully cured, so we finish it on the grill, which imparts smoke flavor and makes the fish safe to eat. The end product is flavorful, tender, juicy and quite versatile. Partially cured Hot Smoked Salmon is great served hot off the grill or cooled and eaten on salads, sandwiches or as a snack.
Here’s a recipe that brings together succulent smoky pork belly and the crispy fried goodness of all of the other state fair favorite foods. These smoked Pork Belly Corn Fritters are nearly impossible to stop eating, so make sure you’ve got plenty to go ’round!
Why choose between smoked wings and fried wings when you can have both! These smoke fried chicken wings begin their journey on the smoker, and finish with a dip in the fryer. And once you try this scratch made buffalo sauce, you’ll be whipping up your own sauce every time you make wings!
We love Chili around here, and the season is right. Instead of ground beef, we take a page out of the competition chili handbook and swapped to tri-tip as it is lean, and will continue to stay tender when braised without falling apart. Enjoy!
If you're looking for fun and creative ways to use your pellet smoker, this is a really cool one. We saw this over on TastingTable's website and had to give it a try ourselves. The Italian delicacy bottarga, is made of salted, cured fish roe, most often of the grey mullet which is found along coastlines. Of course, here in the middle of America, there is no egg more accessible than the chicken egg, so the choice to cure the yolk for the same effect makes total sense to us. The process is lengthy, though uncomplicated. It's a really fun little experiment that yields a new smoky, salty condiment to top your pasta, salads or breakfast dishes.