Bacon Wrapped Armadillo Eggs

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These bacon wrapped armadillo eggs are a happy little jalapeno popper meatball mashup. They’re filling enough to be a main dish, but also portable enough to serve as appetizers, snacks, or tailgating munchies. If you have a BBQ need, these armadillo eggs are here to please!

Sliced bacon wrapped armadillo egg on a serving platter with text overlay - Bacon Wrapped Armadillo Eggs.

What Are Armadillo Eggs?

Armadillo eggs are a Texas BBQ staple. Cream cheese-stuffed jalapenos are wrapped in pork sausage and smoked over oak wood. Each pitmaster has their own secrets to making the best armadillo eggs. Some fill them with a special blend of cheeses, some season their sausage with a secret blend of spices, and others brush theirs with BBQ sauce during the smoking process.

For this recipe, I used classic Hey Grill Hey ingredients and added a little more pork goodness to the armadillo eggs by making them bacon-wrapped armadillo eggs.

Jalapenos being stuffed with a cream cheese filling.

Ingredients for Armadillo Eggs

Now that you know the goodness that awaits you with this recipe, here’s what you’ll need to make them.

You can purchase both Sweet Rub and Everything BBQ Sauce from the Hey Grill Hey Store. If you don’t have any on hand when you go to make this recipe and you can’t wait for delivery, you can make both the rub and sauce from scratch using my recipes for Best Sweet Rub and Kansas City BBQ Sauce.

Armadillo eggs in various stages of being wrapped in sausage and bacon on a rimmed baking sheet.

How to Make Armadillo Eggs

Alright folks, let’s get into making these tasty treats! Here’s how to make armadillo eggs.

  1. Preheat. Fire up your favorite smoker (offset, pellet, electric, whatever floats your boat), and preheat to 250 degrees F with your favorite hardwood like hickory, oak, or maple)..
  2. Stuff the jalapenos. Combine ingredients for the filling (cream cheese, in a small bowl and spoon equal amounts into the cored and seeded jalapenos.
  3. Wrap in sausage. Wrap the stuffed jalapenos with sausage, ensuring that each jalapeno is evenly covered. Roll back and forth to form them into an egg shape.
  4. Wrap in bacon. Next, wrap each sausage covered jalapeno with 1-2 pieces of bacon. Tuck the ends of the bacon to secure. You can also use a toothpick if needed, but remember to remove these beforing serving them to your guests.
  5. Smoke. Place the bacon wrapped armadillo eggs directly on the grill grates of the preheated smoker. Close the lid, and smoke until the internal temperature reaches 165 degrees F.
  6. Sauce. For soft bacon, remove the armadillo eggs from the smoker, brush with Everything BBQ Sauce, and serve immediately. For crispier bacon, brush on the BBQ sauce, increase the heat of the grill to 400 degrees F, and cook for 2-3 minutes to set the sauce and crisp the bacon.
  7. Enjoy. Rest for 5 minutes and serve warm. Dig in! These are SO GOOD!

Armadillo eggs on the smoker with an internal thermometer reading 165 degrees F.

How Long to Smoke Armadillo Eggs

It takes approximately 2 hours to smoke armadillo eggs with your smoker running steady at 250 degrees F.

This time may vary from person to person and smoke to smoke. If your sausage or bacon is thicker, plan on a bit more time to fully cook the meat. Rather than watching the clock while these are on the smoker, invest in a reliable meat thermometer and continue to smoke until the internal temperature reaches 165 degrees F.

Three bacon wrapped armadillo eggs on a black serving platter.

Notes for Making Armadillo Eggs

  • The jalapeno will retain a little crunch. Not like a raw jalapeno, but like an al dente noodle. Soft, with a little texture. If you want completely soft jalapenos, I recommend roasting them for 4-5 minutes at 450 degrees F before seeding, stuffing, and using in this recipe.
  • The bacon will be soft-cooked bacon. Not soggy bacon, but not crispy either. The fat will be almost completely rendered because of the long cook time and you’ll just be able to bite right through the bacon. If you want crispy bacon, crank up the heat in your smoker to 400 degrees F for the last few minutes of cooking, or place them under the broiler in your oven for 2-3 minutes.
  • If you don’t have a smoker, these can be done in the oven. Place the armadillo eggs on an elevated rack above a baking sheet (I use a flat cooling rack) and follow the same time and temperature guidelines written in the recipe.

Sliced bacon wrapped armadillo egg on a serving platter.

Armadillo Eggs Recipe

Making good food should be easy, and Hey Grill Hey is here to help! Over at the Hey Grill Hey Store, we have sauces, rubs, and more to save you time and energy when you’re busy at the grill. Check it out today!

This post was originally published in October 2018. We recently updated it with more information and helpful tips. The recipe remains the same.

Bacon Wrapped Armadillo Eggs

By: Susie Bulloch (heygrillhey.com)
4.97 from 32 votes
These bacon wrapped armadillo eggs are a happy little jalapeno popper meatball mashup. They're filling enough to be a main dish, but also portable enough to make these as appetizers, snacks, or tailgating munchies. If you have a BBQ need, these armadillo eggs are here to please!
Prep Time20 minutes
Cook Time2 hours
Total Time2 hours 20 minutes
Servings6 people

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Ingredients
 

  • 1 pound pork sausage
  • 12 slices bacon
  • 6 jalapenos stems, core, and seeds removed
  • 1 cup Everything BBQ Sauce recipe link in notes

Armadillo Egg Filling

Instructions
 

  • Preheat. Fire up the smoker and preheat to 250 degrees F. I used cherry wood for this recipe, but any other smoking hardwood would work (hickory, oak, maple, etc.)
  • Make the filling. In a medium bowl, combine the cream cheese, cheddar cheese, and 1 Tablespoon of Sweet Rub.
  • Fill the jalapenos. Spoon some of the cream cheese filling into each of the cored and seeded jalapenos. Use the back of the spoon to press the filling all of the way into the jalapeno.
  • Wrap in sausage. Wrap each jalapeno with 1/6 of the pork sausage. Use your hands to ensure the sausage is covering the entire jalapeno and roll back and forth into an egg shape.
  • Wrap in bacon. Wrap each sausage covered jalapeno with bacon. It will likely take two pieces per armadillo egg. Secure with toothpicks, if needed.
  • Smoke. Place the bacon wrapped armadillo eggs on the smoker over indirect heat and close the lid. Smoke until the internal temperature reads 165 degrees F. This usually takes around 2 hours, depending on the size of your armadillo eggs.
  • Baste with BBQ sauce. If you want soft, bite through bacon, brush the armadillo eggs with Everything BBQ Sauce and serve immediately. If you want crispy bacon, brush the eggs with sauce and then increase the heat to 400 degrees F and cook for a few minutes. You can also transfer the eggs to a baking sheet and place them under your oven broiler for 1-2 minutes. 
  • Enjoy. Remove the armadillo eggs from the smoker a rest for 5 minutes before serving warm.

Notes

Sweet Rub
Everything BBQ Sauce

Nutrition

Calories: 658kcal | Carbohydrates: 26g | Protein: 24g | Fat: 51g | Saturated Fat: 20g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 6g | Monounsaturated Fat: 20g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 121mg | Sodium: 1448mg | Potassium: 493mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 17g | Vitamin A: 904IU | Vitamin C: 18mg | Calcium: 227mg | Iron: 3mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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About

FOUNDER/BBQ BOSS LADY

Susie is the BBQ Brain behind the Hey Grill Hey website. Her passion for smoked meats and developing fun, new recipes have landed her on the Food Network, cooking turkeys with Shaq, and on a couple of Guinness World Records. When she’s not grilling, she is hanging out with Todd and their three kids, preferably outdoors!

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Reader Reviews

115 Reviews

  1. Natalie S says:

    Have you ever made these and froze after cooking? If so, what is the best way to heat them up after thawing?

    1. Hey Grill Hey says:

      You can freeze them before or after cooking. If you freeze after cooking, just thaw overnight in the fridge. You can bring back to temp over low heat, or place them in a sealed bag and warm in a pot of boiling water. You can also freeze them after assembly. If you go that route, thaw overnight, then cook according to the recipe card.

  2. Kelly says:

    Can you bake the armadillo eggs in the oven?

    1. Hey Grill Hey says:

      You can follow these instructions and make in your oven.

  3. Jeffrey Ackerman says:

    I learned a trick for stuffing the cream cheese/cheddar cheese into the jalapenos.
    Scoop a ball of cheese into your hands and roll it to create a shape that allows you to insert the cheese roll into the cored jalapeno. I find that this method is faster, ensures the cheese reaches the far end of the cavity, and eliminates the risk of splitting the jalapeno with the spoon as you try to pack the cheese into the jalapeno. 🙂

  4. Greg John says:

    It was a recipe thT .SD Sen e