Dub
Shack BBQ Presents Smoked Meatloaf
Because every day really is a great day for
barbecue.
Ingredients
·
Ground beef, at least 2 lbs.
·
2 eggs, beaten
·
Bread crumbs
·
Table salt
·
Black pepper
·
Basil
·
Oregano
·
Sage
·
Big 6 dry rub
·
½ cup of milk
·
Diced tomatoes
·
Diced onions
·
Chopped green peppers
·
Shredded cheese (I prefer Mexican but
make it your own)
·
Brown sugar
Step One: Find the largest mixing bowl in your
kitchen cabinet and mix all the ingredients except for brown sugar and ketchup/barbecue
sauce together. Don’t be afraid to get your hands dirty playing in the bowl,
and if you are, the sink should be nearby. Wearing gloves may help alleviate
the fear of icky fingers if that is your prerogative.
Step Two: Pick up the mixture, form it, and set it
in a meatloaf pan. I have a metal pan at home that my wife bought somewhere
that does the job well enough, but if you lack that, the aluminum meatloaf pans
found in most housewares/cookware aisles in the average retail outfit will
suffice. If you haven’t lit your grill to 350℉, go outside and do so: While you’re lighting it, make sure you set
it for indirect cooking – and if you don’t know what that is, position all your
coals to one side of the grill, and put the cooked item on the opposite side. I
used charcoal briquettes and a few chunks of Cherrywood to get through the
cook. It’s fast, but not so swift that you would have to worry about being away
for too long.
Step Three: Once the grill hits 350 ℉ place the
meatloaf pan on the indirect side of your grill and close it. I cannot stress
it enough that “lookin’ ain’t cookin’”;
just let the protein and coals do their work. At one hour in, it is always a
good idea to check the internal temperature to know how your cook is coming
along with a thermometer. Ground beef requires a temperature of at least 160℉
before it is fully cooked, and this is no exception; no one wants an
undercooked comfort headliner.
Step Four:
Two hours later and an internal temperature of at least 160 (I took mine
up to 180 to be safe), the meatloaf is done. Carefully bring it inside wearing
heatproof gloves, and if you don’t have any, use Mama’s pan holders to
transport the featured protein. In a separate bowl, mix brown sugar, Big 6 dry
rub, and ketchup/barbecue sauce together until the sugar is fully blended; pour
mixture over the meatloaf and let it rest five to ten minutes before serving.
It’s worth a try and gives the oven a break from
having to work so hard through those chilly months. Even if you’ve put your
grills and smokers away for the winter, smoked meatloaf is an easy meal with a
barbecue twist – again, every day is a great day for barbecue. Bring them out
and be the star of your family dinner tonight!
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