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Cajun Smoked Turkey on a Stick Burner

Cajun Smoked Turkey

I fired up my stick burner for this one — real wood, real smoke, and a Cajun kick that just works on turkey. This recipe’s got a bunch of solid tips for cooking a juicy bird, no matter what flavors you like to use. If you’re after that true smoked turkey look and taste, this is how you do it.

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cajun smoked turkey

Cajun Smoked Turkey


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Description

Simple Cajun smoked turkey cooked over real wood and charcoal — full of smoke, spice, and tips for a juicy bird every time.


Ingredients

  • 1 whole turkey, thawed
  • 1 bottle Malcom’s Bird Brine
  • 1 bottle Malcom’s King Craw Cajun Seasoning
  • Meat Bag (optional)
  • Water (enough to completely submerge turkey)
  • 1 stick butter
  • 1 cup chicken broth
  • 1 stalk celery, cut into chunks
  • 1 medium onion, quartered
  • 1 head garlic, smashed
  • Cooking spray or oil (for coating the skin)
  • Chicken Rack (optional)

Instructions

  1. Brine the Bird
    1. Start with a completely thawed turkey. In a large Meat Bag or food-safe container, mix Malcom’s Bird Brine with 1 gallon of water. (For turkeys 12-14lbs or less, use 1/2 bottle. For turkeys over 14lbs, use entire bottle).
    2. Submerge the turkey and add more water as needed to cover it completely. Tie the bag up tight and refrigerate for 24 hours.
    3. Brining helps the meat stay juicy and pull flavor deep inside — it’s one step you don’t want to skip.
  2. Prep the Turkey
    1. After at least 24 hours, remove the turkey from the brine and pat it completely dry with paper towels.
    2. Stuff the cavity with celery, onion, and garlic.
    3. Tuck the wings and tie the legs so everything cooks evenly and the tips don’t burn.
  3. Make the Injection (optional)
    1. Mix 1 stick of butter, 1 cup chicken broth and about 2 tablespoons Malcom’s King Craw Cajun Seasoning.
    2. Stir to combine. Inject the mixture into the breast, thighs, and wings, distributing evenly. Season the Skin
    3. Spray or rub the outside of the turkey with cooking spray or oil — this helps crisp the skin and gives the seasoning something to stick to.
    4. Generously coat the bird with Malcom’s King Craw Cajun Seasoning (or your fave turkey seasoning).
  4. Smoke the Turkey
    1. Fire up your smoker for indirect cooking and add your favorite wood (hickory and pecan work great). Run the pit around 275°F. Place the turkey on the smoker breast side up.
  5. Protect the Turkey
    1. When the skin has the color you want — that deep golden-brown Cajun look — spray the outside again with cooking spray and loosely tent with foil to prevent over-darkening.
    2. Continue cooking until the breast hits 160°F internal and the dark meat reaches about 175°F.
  6. Rest and Serve
    1. Remove the turkey from the pit and let it rest for at least 20-30 minutes before carving. This lets the juices redistribute and keeps the meat tender.

Notes

  • Don’t skip the dry step. The drier the skin, the better it browns and crisps up.
  • Use a meat thermometer. It’s the only way to nail that perfect doneness.
  • Color control: On a stick burner, smoke runs heavy — so tent the turkey once the color looks good. You want mahogany, not black.
  • Flavor variations: Swap Malcom’s King Craw Cajun Seasoning for your favorite turkey seasoning — classic poultry blends, garlic and herb, or a buttery savory rub all work great with this same process.

Every turkey cooks a little different, but if you take your time and let the smoke do the work, you’ll end up with one you’re proud to carve. That’s the kind of bird everyone remembers.

Malcom Reed
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The post Cajun Smoked Turkey on a Stick Burner appeared first on HowToBBBQRight.

Smoked Brisket Bacon Burgers

Smoked Brisket Bacon Burgers

This ain’t your average backyard burger. We’re talking real deal, smoked low and slow, ground brisket mixed with bacon fat flavor bombs. Stack it high with cheese and toppings — and don’t forget a toasted bun to soak up all that juice.

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Smoked Brisket Bacon Burgers

Smoked Brisket Bacon Burgers


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Description

Ground brisket WITH raw bacon to make the best smoked burgers. These brisket bacon burgers are rich, smoky, and packed with flavor. The brisket gives you that beefy bite and the bacon brings in a smoky saltiness that puts ’em over the top. You might wanna wear a bib — these burgers are juicy!


Ingredients

  • 16 lb whole packer brisket (untrimmed)
  • 23 lbs bacon ends & pieces (or thick-cut bacon)
  • Killer Hogs Steak Rub (or salt, pepper, garlic)
  • Burger buns (toasted)
  • Sliced cheese
  • Pickles
  • Red onion slices
  • Lettuce
  • Tomato slices
  • Big Malc’s Burger Sauce (or your favorite burger sauce)

Big Malc’s Burger Sauce

  • ½ cup Blue Plate mayonnaise (or your favorite mayo)

  • 1 tablespoon yellow mustard

  • ¼ cup sweet pickle relish (juice and all)

  • 1 tablespoon freshly grated onion (with juice)

  • ½ teaspoon Killer Hogs TX Rub (or a mix of coarse salt & black pepper)

  • ½ teaspoon paprika (for color)

  • 1–2 teaspoons red wine vinegar (just a drizzle)


Instructions

  1. Prep the Brisket and Bacon
    1. Cut the brisket into 1½ to 2-inch chunks, separating the flat from the point if needed.
    2. Keep the fat on — you want a good lean-to-fat ratio for juicy burgers.
    3. Cut bacon into similar-sized pieces so it runs through the grinder easily.
    4. Chill the meat in the freezer for 20 minutes before grinding.
  2. Grind the Meat
    1. Alternate brisket and bacon as you feed it through the grinder to evenly mix.
    2. Grind the meat with the large plate first then if you want a finer grind, repeat the grind process
    3. Chill the ground brisket-bacon mix in the refrigerator until ready to form patties.
  3. Form the Burger Patties
    1. Weigh out about 8 oz portions and loosely form into balls.
    2. Use a burger press or hand-form into patties. Use parchment or a Ziploc bag for easy cleanup.
    3. Make a slight dimple in the center to prevent the patties from puffing up too much.
  4. Season the Burgers
    1. Season the outside of each patty with Killer Hogs Steak Rub or your favorite burger seasoning.
    2. Remember the bacon adds salt, so don’t overdo it.
  5. Fire Up the Smoker
    1. Set your pit to 275°F using Royal Oak briquettes for a coal bed then add wood splits for heat.
    2. Place burgers directly on the grates and smoke for about 45 minutes, flipping after 30.
    3. Cook to an internal temp of 145°F for a juicy medium finish.
  6. Build Your Burger
    1. Toast your buns and spread Big Malc’s Burger Sauce on both sides.
    2. Layer on: Pickles, Red onion, Lettuce, Tomato, Double cheese (cheddar + Swiss), Smoked brisket bacon patty
    3. Crown it with the top bun and get ready to lean in.

You could fry up a burger in a pan… or you could do it right and smoke a brisket bacon burger that hits like a steakhouse sandwich on steroids. Get you a cold drink, grab two hands, and get ready to lean in — it’s a juicy one.

Malcom Reed
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Savory Smoked Pork Belly

Melt-In-Your-Mouth Smoked Pork Belly

I’ve cooked pork belly a lot of different ways… pork belly burnt ends… sweet and pulled… deep fried… but this method is savory, smokey and melt in yo’ mouth! It has a real pit smoked flavor and it’s nothing short of delicious!

Tender, Juicy, and Packed with Flavor!

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smoked pork belly

Savory Smoked Pork Belly


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Description

I love bold, smoky, melt-in-your-mouth pork belly… and this one does not disappoint. It’s fatty and delicious and tastes like real pit-smoked pork belly.


Ingredients

  • 5 lb pork belly, cut in half
  • 2 tbsp Killer Hogs Hot Sauce
  • 2 tbsp yellow mustard
  • Killer Hogs Hot Rub (to taste)
  • Killer Hogs TX Brisket Rub (to taste)
  • 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 1/4 cup water

Instructions

  1. Prepare the Pork Belly: Pat the pork belly dry with paper towels and cut it in half for more even cooking.
  2. Apply the Binder: Coat each piece of pork belly with Killer Hogs Hot Sauce and yellow mustard to help the seasoning stick.
  3. Season Generously: First, apply a good layer of Killer Hogs Hot Rub, then follow with a layer of Killer Hogs TX Rub for extra depth of flavor.
  4. Preheat the Smoker: Set up your smoker for indirect heat and bring the temperature to 275-300°F.
  5. Smoke the Pork Belly: Place the pork belly pieces on the smoker and cook for about 2 hours.
  6. Prepare the Spritz: Mix 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar and 1/4 cup water in a spray bottle.
  7. Spritz Regularly: After the first 30 minutes, begin spritzing the pork belly every 30 minutes to keep it moist and enhance the bark.
  8. Check the Internal Temperature: Continue smoking until the internal temperature reaches 202-208°F.
  9. Rest the Pork Belly: Remove the pork belly from the smoker and let it rest for at least 20-30 minutes. For even better results, rest it in a dry cooler for an hour.
  10. Slice and Serve: Slice the pork belly to your preferred thickness and enjoy!

Malcom Reed
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Hot Honey Ribs

Hot Honey Ribs

These Smoked Hot Honey Ribs are next-level BBQ! The spare ribs are coated with hot sauce and hot rub, then smoked low and slow over hickory wood and wrapped with a buttery, sweet & Hot Honey Sauce for an irresistible bite. If you love your bbq sweet with a little heat, these ribs will make do the rib dance!

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Hot Honey Ribs


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Description

A little sweet… a little savory… and a kick of spice. These Hot Honey ribs are not only beautiful, they are down-right delicious1


Ingredients

For the Rib Wrap:

  • 1 cup light brown sugar
  • 10oz apple juice
  • 1/4 cup Mike’s Hot Honey
  • 1/4 cup Killer Hogs Vinegar Sauce
  • 3 sticks salted butter (split in half lengthwise)

For the Rib Glaze:


Instructions

  1. Trim ribs and remove membrane. Apply light coat of hot sauce for a binder and season well with Killer Hogs Hot Rub.
  2. Prepare pit for smoking at 275°F using hickory wood for smoke flavor. I used my Outlaw stick burner pit but any smoker/indirect grilll will work just keep the temp steady at 275°F.
  3. Place the ribs on the pit and smoke for 2 hours. Spritz with water if the outside starts to look dry after an hour in the smoke.
  4. Make the rib wrap liquid – combine brown sugar, apple juice, hot honey, and vinegar sauce in a glass measuring cup. Microwave for 3 1/2 minutes and allow to cool at room temp.
  5. To wrap the ribs remove each slab from the pit; use a double layer of aluminum foil; place the ribs meat side down on the foil, add 1/2 cup of wrap liquid to each slab; place 1 stick of the butter over the top; and close the foil around the ribs.
  6. Place the ribs back on the pit and cook for 1 1/2 hours or until tender. Internal temp should be around 202-205°F.
  7. Rest the ribs in a dry cooler for 1 hour before glazing.
  8. To glaze: place each rack on a foil covered raised cooling rack meat side down; dust with a little Hot Rub and place back on the pit for 5 minutes; brush with The BBQ Sauce and cook for 7 additional minutes. Flip the ribs over and dust the meat side with Hot Rub and return to the pit for 5 minutes. Brush the meat side with The BBQ Sauce and drizzle with Hot Honey; blend the honey in with the bbq sauce and return to the pit for 7 additional minutes to set.
  9. Cut the slabs into individual bone pieces and serve.

Malcom Reed
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Mesquite Smoked Turkey

Mesquite Smoked Turkey

Mesquite Smoked Turkey

Smoked Thanksgiving Turkey Recipe – brined with sweet tea, spatchcocked, injected and seasoned with Texas flavors, then smoked over mesquite wood for a flavorful, beautiful, juicy, smoked turkey.

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Mesquite Smoked Turkey


Description

Smoked Turkey Recipe using a Sweet Tea Brine, Texas Flavors and Mesquite Wood.


Ingredients

Turkey Injection


Instructions

  1. Place turkey in a large container and add the full bottle of bird brine and the lemons. Pour in the sweet tea and make sure the turkey is fully submerged in the brine. Place in the refrigerator or a cooler with ice for 24 hours.
  2. Remove turkey from brine and pat dry. Spatchcock the turkey by flipping it over breast side down. Use kitchen shears to cut along the back bone on each side removing it from the bird. Cut the breast bone with a chefs knife and press down on the bird until it pops. Flip the turkey over breast side up and tuck the wing tips behind the neck.
  3. Brush peanut oil over the skin and season with Holy Gospel Rub followed by a light layer of TX Rub. Inject the breast, thighs, and legs with the injection.
  4. Prepare stick burner pit for indirect smoking at 275°F using lump charcoal and post oak splits for fuel. (Do not add the mesquite wood at this point)
  5. Place the turkey on the pit and add 2-3 chunks of mesquite wood to the fire for smoke flavor.
  6. At the 1 hour mark insert a probe thermometer into the breast of the turkey. Set the thermometer to 160°F. Add a couple more chunks of mesquite to the hot coals.
  7. Monitor the internal temperate of the turkey and hold the pit at 275° the entire cook. Once the thermometer alarm sounds carefully remove the turkey from the pit and let it rest for 10 minutes before carving.

Keywords: Mesquite Smoked Turkey, Mesquite Turkey, spatchcock turkey, smoked spatchcock turkey, smoked turkey, smoked turkey recipes, smoked whole turkey, best smoked turkey, smoked thanksgiving turkey

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Smoked Easter Brisket

Smoked Easter Brisket

Smoked Easter Brisket

If you are tried of serving the same old ham for Easter Dinner every year, try a “Smoked Easter Brisket”. If it’s not already a thing… it should be! WHAT MALCOM USED IN THIS RECIPE: Print
smoked easter brisket

Smoked Easter Brisket


Description

Smoked Brisket seasoned with typical “roast” flavors and braised with wine. Once the brisket is tender, the braising liquid is used to make a Beef Onion Gravy. A recipe perfect for serving on Easter.

Ingredients

  • 1 whole brisket 13-15lbs
  • 2 Tablespoons Killer Hogs AP Seasoning
  • 1 packet Lipton Beefy Onion Soup Mix
  • 2 cups Beef Broth
  • 2 large onions sliced
  • 68 cloves garlic minced
  • 3 Tablespoons tomato paste
  • 2 cups red wine
  • 34 bay leaves
  • 1/4 cup flour
  • 1/2 stick butter

Instructions

  1. Prepare smoker for indirect cooking at 275°F using Hickory wood splits for fuel and flavor.  (Any smoker can be used for this recipe, keep the temps steady at 275°F)
  2. Trim the brisket by removing thick areas of fat and sinew from the top and bottom.  Season with AP seasoning followed by the packet of Beefy Onion soup mix. Allow the brisket to set it at room temperature for 15-20 minutes before placing it on the smoker. 
  3. Smoke the brisket at 275°F until the outside starts to turn dark about 3 1/2 – 4 hours.  At this point remove the brisket from the pit and place in a large aluminum pan.
  4. Add the beef broth, wine, tomato paste, garlic, onions, and bay leaves to the pan.  Insert a probe thermometer into the thickest part of the flat, and cover the pan with aluminum foil. 
  5. Place the brisket back on the pit and continue to cook until the probe thermometer reaches 202°F.  At this point check the brisket for tenderness.  It should feel really soft when you insert a hand held thermometer in all areas of the brisket. 
  6. Remove the brisket from the pit and carefully take it out of the braising liquid.  Place it on a sheet pan and loosely cover with aluminum foil.
  7. Pour the pan liquid through a colander to separate the onions form the liquid. Pour the liquid into a fat separator or ladle off any fat from the top of the bowl.  
  8. In a deep saute pan over medium heat add the flour and butter and stir for a few minutes to create a roux.  Slowly whisk in the separate liquid (about 2 cups) and whisk until it starts to bubble and thicken.  At this point stir in the onions and taste for seasoning.  If it needs a little salt and pepper just use a sprinkle of AP.  
  9. Slice the brisket across the grain and serve with the brisket onion gravy. 

Keywords: Easter brisket, smoked easter brisket, brisket recipe, beef brisket, smoked brisket, how to smoke a brisket, smoked brisket, offset smoker, simple brisket recipe

Malcom Reed
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