How to Smoke on a Gas Grill

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Today we’re walking you through How to Smoke on a Gas Grill. Don’t have a smoker? No fear! I’ll walk you step by step through the process of turning your good ol’ gas grill into a smoking machine.

collage of smoking on a gas grill with smoke tube pellet and wood chip pouch

Can You Smoke Meat on a Gas Grill?

You most definitely can smoke meat on a gas grill! In fact, you can smoke whatever food you want on a grill. If you only have a trusty gas grill on your patio, but you’re craving that delicious flavor of smoked meat, no fear! Whether you’re wanting to cold smoke or hot smoke something delicious, you can add some smoke to your gas grill to get the best of both worlds!

What is Cold Smoking?

Cold smoking is a great way to smoke a variety of foods when you don’t want to actually cook them. I use cold smoking for making smoked cheese, cold smoked salmon, smoked salt, and much more. For cold smoking, you’re looking at a target temperature of less than 80 degrees F in your grill with the smoke running constantly during the entire process. Because you’re aiming for such a low temperature, I like to cold smoke in the cooler months during autumn and winter.

One way to make cold smoking a reality on your grill is to use a pellet tube smoker. These are relatively inexpensive (usually under $15), and they are easy to use.

lighting a pellet smoke tube in a grill.

How to Cold Smoke

Here’s the basics on how to cold smoke:

  1. Fill the pellet tube smoker. Fill up your tube smoker with wood cooking pellets. Make sure you purchase cooking pellets and not wood heating pellets. These are not made for cooking. Fill the tube until the pellets are an inch from the top.
  2. Light the end. Simply light one end of the tube with a match or a lighter and let it burn for 3-5 minutes.
  3. Blow out the flame. Blow out the flame, and now you’re ready to cold smoke!
  4. Get smoking! Place the pellet tube smoker in your grill, close the lid, and smoke!

With the use of a pellet tube, you can turn anything into a cold smoker. Whether it’s your gas grill, pellet smoker, regular smoker, charcoal or grill, you can now cold smoke. As long as your grill has enough space and a lid to hold in the smoke, you can turn it into a cold smoker.

Cold Smoking Recipes

Now that you know the basics on how to cold smoke, try out these tasty cold smoking recipes from Hey Grill Hey:

Cold Smoked Salmon
Smoked Cheese

gas grill with smoke rising from the lid.

Smoking on a Gas Grill

Next up, hot smoking! For hot smoking, we’re looking to keep our grill at temperatures between 180 degrees F and 275 degrees F. This means you’re cooking your food while adding smoke flavor. If you’re cooking on a gas grill, this works for any number of meats and veggies. Hot smoking works for any food you’re cooking that you want to add a smoke flavor to. The possibilities are endless!

There are two differing opinions about wood chips when smoking on a gas grill. Do you use soaked pellets or nice and dry ones? I prefer a soaked wood chip if I’m going to be adding it directly to the fire like in a charcoal or offset smoker because it generates steam and turns into smoke to give your wood chips more longevity. When making a smoking pouch (as detailed in the next section), I like to use dry chips because you’re placing them directly over the burners in your gas grill.

dry wood chips piled in the middle of heavy duty aluminum foil.

How to Smoke on a Gas Grill with Chips

To add smoke to my gas grill, I make my own smoking pouch out of wood chips. Here’s how you do it:

  1. Grab some aluminum foil. Tear off two large pieces of heavy duty aluminum foil and layer them flat on your work surface.
  2. Make the pouch. Place two cups of dry wood chips on the center of your foil. Fold up each long side and crimp to secure. Then roll up the ends to make a sealed wood chip pouch.
  3. Poke holes in the pouch. Poke holes in the top of your pouch to allow the heat from the fire to singe the wood chips inside the pouch and make some gorgeous smoke that will be released through the holes and add a delicious smoke flavor to your food.
  4. Add the pouch to your grill. Take off one of your grates on your gas grill, and nestle your pouch right over one of your burners. Replace the grates, and you’re ready to go.
  5. Fire up the grill! Turn on your burner on your gas grill (I used my Weber Genesis II). If you’re aiming for a temperature of 180-275 degrees F, you’ll likely only need to turn on one burner. This will heat the pouch, circulate the smoke through the grill, and it should provide enough heat to get your grill to a perfect smoking temperature.
  6. Cook your food. Place your food on the opposite side of the grill from the smoking pouch, close the lid, and use the dome thermometer on your grill to monitor the temperature. Turn on additional burners as needed to maintain your desired smoking temperature (this is often around 225 degrees).
  7. Keep and eye on your grill and your smoke packet. It’s going to take about 45 minutes to burn through all of your wood pellets in the pouch, so have extras on hand when the first one burns through. Continue to cook and smoke your food until it reaches your desired internal temperature/doneness.

wood chip foil pouch in a gas grill.

Smoking Meat on a Gas Grill

Ready to add some smoky flavor to your grilled food? Try these recipes and follow the steps above to add some awesome smoked flavor to these tasty meats:

Smoked Salmon with Maple Orange Glaze
Homemade Smoked Bacon

Watch the video below, and let’s make something delicious! I’m all about helping you make better BBQ, feed the people you love, and become a BBQ hero. Check out more Hey Grill Hey behind the scenes action on InstagramFacebook, and YouTube!

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

26 Reviews

  1. Ralph Renzetti says:

    I tried this on my Nepoleon Gas Grille and it worked perfectly! I had a little trouble getting the temperature where you suggested in sub freezing temps, but it worked!
    Thanks

  2. Stacey says:

    Would this be an okay method to use for smoking larger cuts, like brisket? Thanks!

    1. Hey Grill Hey says:

      Yes! If you’re using foil packs, make sure to make a bunch of them so when one is out you can easily swap in another.

  3. Deborah F Hopper says:

    I will be using some wood chip on a charcoal grill to get some of the smoked flavor, thank you.

  4. Chef David says:

    I Love the way you Advertise your Cooking Methods and the other things that you are doing for this will help me out in the Future and I am very well pleased with the way you do things and I also enjoy the other things that you are doing and I hope that you will continue to so.

  5. low and slow says:

    Sadly the smoker tube is currently unavailable on Amazon

  6. Michael S. says:

    Can you use a pellet tube smoker for hot smoking on a gas grill??

    1. Hey Grill Hey says:

      Oh absolutely!! Those work great!

  7. Carol says:

    I have avoided all recipes that require smoking, because I didn’t have one. Now I do! This was very helpful. Thank you!

  8. Pete says:

    This is a really great way to smoke anything! I thought I’ve tried them all but this seems to be the best without having to buy another piece of equipment. KISS is the answer here!

  9. Dwight Lindley says:

    Thanks so much for these instructions! I l look forward to smoking a few things on my gas grill.

  10. Bonnie Joing says:

    I so enjoy your recipes. Have tried many. I have the Genesis grill and have wanted to try some of your smoked recipes for meat. Thank you for the above article on “how to do it”. I’m ready to give it a try!!

    1. Hey Grill Hey says:

      Of course! Let me know how it goes for you!