Some weekends turn into a full smoker project once one person decides the pellet grill is the main plan. These 21 recipes cover the dishes that make that weekend worth talking about, from long-cooked pulled pork and brisket chili to wings, queso, steaks, sides, and a smoked dessert. The list keeps the focus on recipes with real smoke time, clear use cases, and enough range for both the person running the grill and everyone waiting around for the tray to land. Use it when the goal is a spread that sounds like backyard bragging without needing restaurant-level gear.

Smoked Double Stuffed Baked Potatoes

Loaded with russet potatoes, bacon, cream, butter, and cheddar, Smoked Double Stuffed Baked Potatoes need 15 minutes of prep and 2 hours 20 minutes on the smoker. The recipe makes 4 servings, which works well as one loaded potato per person. The first smoke softens the potatoes before the filling gets mashed back in and finished with more cheese. Serve them beside ribs, steak, or chicken when the smoker is already running.
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Smoked Meatballs

Built from ground beef, ground pork, milk-soaked white bread, eggs, and Italian seasoning, Smoked Meatballs make 6 servings in 1 hour 40 minutes total. The recipe forms 36 meatballs, so it gives the smoker operator plenty to pass around before dinner is ready. Starting at 180°F and finishing at 225°F helps the meatballs take on smoke without drying out. Serve with sauce, grilled bread, or a tray of toothpicks for easy weekend snacking.
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Smoked Pork Belly Tacos

Rubbed with brown sugar, paprika, cumin, guajillo chili powder, and chipotle powder, Smoked Pork Belly Tacos take 3 hours 15 minutes and make 10 servings. The pork belly pairs with spicy pickled vegetables made from cucumber, carrots, red onion, garlic, jalapeño, cilantro, and rice wine vinegar. This is the kind of recipe that gives the pellet smoker a real project instead of a quick tray. Set out tortillas, queso, and chips so everyone can build tacos as the pork comes off.
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Smoked Beef Stew

Started with 2 pounds of beef stew meat, red wine, tomato paste, thyme, potatoes, carrots, and peas, Smoked Beef Stew makes 6 servings with 30 minutes of prep and 1 hour of cook time. The beef gets smoked first, then the stew finishes with broth, vegetables, Worcestershire sauce, and cocktail onions. It gives the weekend smoker lineup something spoonable instead of another sliced meat. Serve in bowls with bread when the weather calls for something heavier.
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Smoked Mac & Cheese

Packed with macaroni, milk, heavy cream, cheddar, Gouda, cream cheese, and a bacon-panko topping, Smoked Mac & Cheese makes 10 servings in 2 hours 20 minutes total. The pasta goes into the smoker saucy on purpose so it can hold up through the low heat. Bacon, Parmesan, panko, and butter make the top more than a basic cheese layer. Put it next to smoked chicken or steak when the weekend spread needs a side that can still carry its own pan.
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Smoked Shotgun Shells

Stuffed with ground beef, cheddar, milk, garlic powder, onion powder, and black pepper, Smoked Shotgun Shells wrap 14 cannelloni tubes in bacon for a 4-serving appetizer. The recipe takes 1 hour 50 minutes total, with BBQ sauce brushed on during the final stretch. It is a hands-on smoker project, but the payoff is a tray that looks like the person at the grill planned ahead. Serve before the main meat comes off so nobody hovers hungry.
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Smoked Tomahawk Steak

Seasoned with Montreal Steak Seasoning and finished with mustard seed chimichurri, Smoked Tomahawk Steak serves 2 people after 20 minutes of prep and about 2 hours on the smoker. The chimichurri uses lime juice, shallot, garlic, mustard seeds, olive oil, parsley, cilantro, and red pepper flakes. This one gives the pellet smoker a centerpiece that looks like a full weekend achievement. Slice it off the bone and serve with potatoes or a green side.
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Smoked Meatloaf

Mixed with ground beef, ground pork, chopped bacon, eggs, milk-soaked bread, dehydrated onion flakes, and Italian seasoning, Smoked Meatloaf makes 8 servings in 1 hour 40 minutes total. The sticky sauce uses ketchup, cider vinegar, brown sugar, garlic powder, onion powder, and mustard powder. Bacon goes inside the loaf instead of only around it, which helps the slices stay rich through the smoke. Serve thick slices with potatoes, mac and cheese, or leftover sauce on the side.
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Smoked Pork & Pineapple Skewers

Threaded with pork loin, pineapple, bell pepper, and red onion, Smoked Pork & Pineapple Skewers make 4 servings after a 30-minute marinade and 1 hour 40 minutes total. The marinade uses brown sugar, cider vinegar, fish sauce, and garlic. This keeps the pellet smoker weekend from feeling like only heavy cuts and long cooks. Serve the skewers with corn, rice, or a salad when the grill master wants something bright between bigger meats.
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Smoked Brisket Chili

Made with 6 cups of smoked brisket, diced tomatoes, crushed tomatoes, dark beer, beef broth, beans, masa, and chipotle powder, Smoked Brisket Chili makes 8 servings in 1 hour 15 minutes total. The recipe can simmer on the smoker at 350°F, which gives leftovers a second round of smoke. It turns brisket into a pot that feeds the group without slicing another roast. Set out sour cream, cheddar, jalapeño, tortilla chips, cilantro, and avocado.
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Smoked Pulled Pork

Rubbed with yellow mustard, dark brown sugar, paprika, chili powder, garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne, salt, and pepper, Smoked Pulled Pork serves 12 after a 12-hour cook. The recipe starts with a 5-pound pork butt and uses apple juice during the smoke. This is the long weekend project your brother will absolutely keep mentioning because it takes patience. Use it for sandwiches, rice bowls, tacos, or freezer portions after everyone has eaten.
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Smoked Dry Rubbed Wings

Coated with olive oil, chili powder, paprika, cumin, onion powder, garlic powder, thyme, and smoked hot paprika, Smoked Dry Rubbed Wings make 6 servings in about 1 hour. The wings smoke at 225°F until they reach 165°F, then go back over higher heat for a crisper finish. Sauce is not needed because the rub carries the flavor. Serve with slaw, cornbread, or a simple dip when the smoker is already hot.
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Smoked Chicken Thighs

Seasoned with Montreal Chicken Seasoning and cooked bone-in with the skin on, Smoked Chicken Thighs make 4 servings in 1 hour 40 minutes total. The recipe uses 1.5 pounds of chicken thighs and keeps the ingredient list short, which makes it a strong first smoker dish. The thighs cook at 225°F until the meat reaches 165°F near the bone. Serve with BBQ sauce, succotash, slaw, or a creamy pasta side.
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Reverse Seared Smoked Steaks with Smoked Garlic Butter

Started on the smoker and finished in a hot skillet, Reverse Seared Smoked Steaks with Smoked Garlic Butter make 4 servings in 1 hour 5 minutes total. The recipe uses New York strip steaks, Montreal steak seasoning, smoked garlic, parsley, chipotle powder, and butter. Smoking first gives the steaks time to take on flavor before the sear builds the outside. Serve with baked potatoes or grilled asparagus when the weekend calls for steak without a steakhouse bill.
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Traeger Smoked Chicken Spatchcock

Flattened for even cooking and seasoned with Montreal chicken seasoning or another chicken rub, Traeger Smoked Chicken Spatchcock makes 6 servings in 2 hours 10 minutes total. The recipe starts at 180°F, moves to 225°F, then uses high heat or a broiler step to crisp the skin. It gives the pellet smoker a whole-bird option without the long timeline of a turkey. Carve it for a family dinner or use leftovers in sandwiches.
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Smoked Berry Crisp

Made with blueberries, blackberries, lemon juice, brown sugar, oats, flour, butter, cinnamon, salt, and optional pecans, Smoked Berry Crisp makes 4 servings in 25 minutes total. The recipe bakes at 350°F with Woodfire Smoke selected, so it brings dessert into the smoker lineup without taking all afternoon. The oat topping keeps it familiar while the smoke adds a different edge. Serve warm with ice cream after the last round of meat leaves the grill.
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Smoked Turkey Thighs

Seasoned with Montreal Chicken Seasoning and cooked low at 180°F, Smoked Turkey Thighs make 4 servings in 2 hours 10 minutes total. The recipe uses 2 turkey thighs, about 3 pounds, and keeps the method simple with trimming, seasoning, smoking, and a short rest. Turkey thighs give the smoker a meaty option that is not pork or beef. Serve with corn salad, orzo, or a crisp salad when the cook wants a plate that still works as a substantial plate.
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Smoked Queso

Loaded with chorizo, red onion, garlic, cheddar, Rotel tomatoes, Velveeta, jalapeño, evaporated milk, and cilantro, Smoked Queso makes 8 servings in 2 hours 15 minutes total. The chorizo cooks first before the cheese mixture goes into a foil pan on the smoker. It fills the empty grate space while other recipes cook and gives the group something to scoop while waiting. Serve warm with tortilla chips, vegetables, or over grilled chicken.
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Smoked Chicken Al Pastor

Marinated with guajillo chiles, garlic, onion, pineapple juice, orange juice, cider vinegar, achiote paste, cumin, oregano, and chipotle powder, Smoked Chicken Al Pastor serves 8 after an overnight marinade. The full recipe takes 11 hours 10 minutes, with 3 hours of cook time and 8 hours of marinating. Boneless skinless chicken thighs stack with pineapple on a vertical skewer for the smoker. Serve with tortillas, rice, salsa, and lime wedges.
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Smoked Shrimp

Tossed with Fiesta Taco Seasoning or another spice blend, Smoked Shrimp makes 6 servings in 2 hours 10 minutes total. The recipe uses 2 pounds of shrimp, unsalted butter, and lime juice, with basting during the final 90 minutes. It gives the pellet smoker a seafood option for the person who has already proven the pork and beef routine. Serve with bread for the lime butter, or spoon the shrimp over rice.
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Smoked Chicken Legs with Red Pepper Glaze

Coated in olive oil, garlic, lemon juice, rosemary, salt, and pepper, Smoked Chicken Legs with Red Pepper Glaze make 6 servings with 1 hour 30 minutes of cook time. The glaze combines red pepper jelly, bourbon, and Sriracha, then goes on once the legs reach about 155°F. Turning the smoker up to 375°F helps finish the skin and set the glaze. Serve with smoked mac and cheese, fried potatoes, or a crisp salad.
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