Smoked Cheese: A How-to Guide

13 reviews

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Smoked cheese is the perfect snack, sandwich addition, or flavor booster to pasta or soups. I’ll teach you how to smoke cheese so you can replicate this gourmet product at home!

Sliced smoked cheese on a cutting board next to dip and crackers with text overlay - Smoked Cheese.

Smoked Cheese

Smoked cheese is typically only seen at high-end grocers or specialty stores and it comes with a price tag. Luckily, if you’ve got any type of grill at home, you can easily recreate those expensive results over and over again with fantastic results. Plus, you get to have a lot of fun doing it!

Keep in mind that smoking your own cheese at home will take some extra materials or equipment, and there’s a bit of waiting/resting time involved. But if you’re willing to put in the time and effort, you’ll end up with the most amazing, homemade smoked cheese around.

Blocks of cheese being sliced into smaller sizes.

Materials Needed to Smoke Cheese

Here’s what you’ll need to smoke cheese:

  • An outdoor grill. Any variety will do. You don’t need a super fancy or expensive grill to smoke cheese!
  • A cool day. You do not want to be smoking this cheese when the temperature is hot outside. The internal temperature of your grill needs to stay well below 90 degrees F.
  • A smoke tube. This will help you infuse your cheese with all that amazing smoky flavor.
  • Wood pellets. As far as smoke, I prefer using mild wood varieties. My favorites are apple, cherry, maple, or pecan.
  • Parchment paper.
  • Vacuum sealer. This last item is not necessary but highly recommended to help your smoked cheese last as long as possible.

A smoke tube being lit inside a grill.

Best Cheese for Smoking

Feel free to choose your favorite cheese to smoke, though I do recommend hard or semi-hard cheeses for smoking. Soft cheeses have a tendency to take on too much smoke flavor, as well as giving you trouble keeping them from falling through your grill grates.

My favorites are a nice cheddar, hard mozzarella, pepper jack, and gouda. Any of these take on smoke beautifully. I recommend you purchase the large blocks and cut them down into 2-3 inch bricks. Once you feel confident with your technique and flavor profiles, you can branch into more expensive cheeses!

Blocks of cheese on the smoker.

How to Smoke Cheese

Let’s get down to the entire process now, shall we? Here’s how to smoke cheese.

  1. Select a grill. Select an outdoor grill or smoker to smoke your cheese. You won’t be turning on your grill as a heat source, it’s simply acting as the vessel for holding your cheese and keeping the smoke flowing around it.
  2. Light the tube smoker. To make your grill into a cold smoker, light a tube smoker inside the grill. There are different sizes and varieties, but I find I get the most use out of this tube smoker because it lasts long enough but doesn’t take up a lot of space. Light the tube smoker according to the manufacturer’s instructions and place it in your smoker. Make sure the flame is extinguished and the smoke is rolling.
  3. Smoke. Arrange your cheese on the grates, making sure they aren’t touching on the sides and there is airflow around each piece of cheese. Close the lid and smoke for 1-2 hours.
  4. Refrigerate. Once your cheese is done smoking, remove it from the grill and wrap it in parchment or untreated butcher paper. Refrigerate for 24-48 hours.
  5. Vacuum seal the cheese. Remove the cheese from the paper and vacuum seal the cheese. If you don’t have a vacuum sealer, place it in a zip-top freezer bag and get out as much air as you can. Label and date the cheeses.
  6. Refrigerate for 2 weeks. Place your sealed bags in the fridge for 2 weeks. If you sampled some of your cheese right after smoking, you will taste really smoky, almost acrid, cheese. As it sits in the fridge, that smoke flavor will distribute throughout the cheese and mellow out significantly.
  7. Enjoy! After 2 weeks, your cheese will be lovely and ready to enjoy.

How Long to Smoke Cheese

There is no hard and fast rule for how long to smoke cheese. You can leave it on the smoke anywhere from 30 minutes to over 2 hours depending on how smoky you would like the final product.

If you want lighter smoke flavor, leave your cheese on the smoker for around 1 hour. Personally, I like to leave my cheese on for about 2 hours. I find that it takes on enough smoke flavor without becoming overwhelming. 

More Smoked Cheese Recipes

Whether you’re looking for other smoked cheese recipes, or you need some inspiration on how to use this gorgeous, new smoked cheese coming off your smoker, check out a few suggestions below!

Smoked Cheese Recipe

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

Smoked Cheese

By: Susie Bulloch
5 from 13 votes
Smoked cheese is the perfect snack, sandwich addition, or flavor booster to pasta or soups. I'll teach you how to smoke cheese so you can replicate this gourmet product at home!
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time2 hours
Resting Time1 day
Total Time1 day 2 hours 15 minutes
Servings4 people

Video

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Ingredients
 

  • 16 ounces block of cheese cut into small blocks

Instructions
 

  • Select your grill. The grill for this smoked cheese isn't preheated, you're simply using it to cold smoke the cheese. Be sure to use a grill that has good ventilation and one that you can easily track the temperature inside the grill. You do not want the temperature to go above 90 degrees F.
  • Light the tube smoker. Light the tube smoker according to the manufacturer’s instructions and place it in your smoker. Make sure the flame is extinguished and the smoke is rolling before you place the cheese on the grill.
  • Smoke the cheese. Arrange the cheese on the grill grates. For best results, make sure they aren’t touching on the sides and there is airflow around each piece of cheese. Close the lid and smoke the cheese for about 1 hour for a lighter smoke flavor or 2 hours for a bolder smoke flavor.
  • Wrap and refrigerate. Once the cheese is done smoking, remove it from the grill and wrap it in parchment paper or untreated butcher paper. Put it in the fridge for 24-48 hours.
  • Seal tightly. Remove the cheese from the paper and vacuum seal it. If you do not have a vacuum seal, place the cheese in a zip-top bag and remove all the air before sealing tightly.
  • Refrigerate and rest. Once the cheese is sealed, place it back in the fridge for 2 weeks to allow the smoke to distribute through the cheese and mellow.
  • Enjoy. After that 2 week resting period, you're ready to open up that cheese and enjoy it however you please!

Nutrition

Calories: 463kcal | Carbohydrates: 3g | Protein: 26g | Fat: 39g | Saturated Fat: 22g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 8g | Cholesterol: 113mg | Sodium: 742mg | Potassium: 87mg | Sugar: 0.4g | Vitamin A: 1136IU | Calcium: 802mg | Iron: 0.2mg

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

Like this? Leave a comment below!

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

72 Reviews

  1. Miranda says:

    I was hoping to smoke some blocks of cheese to give away at Christmas this year. And due to them being presents, I was going to look into sealing them with wax to give them a protective layer and kept at room temperature. When in this process would be the best time to wax them?

    1. Hey Grill Hey says:

      You can wax after they have been smoked and fully cooled, usually overnight in the fridge. When you wax, make sure to date your cheese and don’t open for 2 weeks.

  2. David P. Kouri says:

    I follow this recipe every time and the smoked cheese always turns out great. Thank you for sharing your talents.

  3. Michael Braun says:

    The smoke cheese is delicious. The most important thing to do after it’s smoked is using sterilized instruments to place it in ziplock bags.
    That will avoid the cheese getting moldy.

  4. JP says:

    How long will the cheese last after the 2 week sealed period? If not using right away, should I freeze it?

    1. van jones says:

      mine has been fine in the fridge for at least a year, will wanna use within about three weeks after opening. the longer it rest, the better it is !!

  5. Steve says:

    Hi Susie. Will the parchment paper wrap stink up my fridge? What does the parchment paper wrap step do?

    1. Dwight says:

      Yes it will. I use a beer fridge in my man cave. The parchment paper wrap allows the cheese to breathe for a bit. I’m not Susie, but I love to smoke cheese. Done it for years.

      1. Steve says:

        Thanks. I’ve been smoking cheese for a few years with good results. But I’ve been going right to vacuum sealing. Just wondering what I’ve been missing by leaving out the parchment paper wrap. My wife would kill me if I smoked up the fridge.

        1. Steven Doden says:

          I’ve done it both ways and I haven’t noticed a difference, except a smokey fridge for a week. I vacuum seal right away.

          1. van jones says:

            I never wrap in paper. I do about 600 pounds a year. go from smoker to countertop to rest to be sure it’s no warmer than room temperature, then vac seal, then to fridge minimum of a week, the longer the better

        2. van jones says:

          I never wrap in paper. I do about 600 pounds a year. go from smoker to countertop to rest to be sure it’s no warmer than room temperature, then vac seal, then to fridge minimum of a week, the longer the better

    2. van jones says:

      I never wrap in paper. I do about 600 pounds a year. go from smoker to countertop to rest to be sure it’s no warmer than room temperature, then vac seal, then to fridge minimum of a week, the longer the better

  6. MARK MCDANIEL says:

    This is awesome. I have been smoking several different cheeses each weekend for the past three weeks. My first cook was in December and wanted to see how it turned out before I went further. My family, neighbors, and friends love the cheese, so now I am smoking when I can. Thanks and a big shout out to you.

  7. Dan J says:

    I smoke a few batches each year, seems to be a great hit with family and friends. Noticed in your photo you leave the wax side on on your gouda. Any particular reason?

  8. Michael says:

    Just did several types of cheese today on my big smoker and just used an old cast iron skillet with some briquets and wood chunks. Smoked for 2 hours can can’t wait until New Years to break it out and taste it. Love your videos and how easy it is to follow them! !

  9. El Sos says:

    Really good stuff here, and lots of comments too! That must mean I’m not the only one that loves smoking cheese 🙂
    I’ve gone from a four hour smoke and let it rest for a couple hours, then straight to a vacuum sealer and in the fridge with no worries.
    Also I think we over think stuff at times, and really all that’s needed is a box, a cookie rack and some smoke…and cool weather.
    Making some snack sticks and smoked cheese strips for vacuum sealing and tossing in the freezer. Mmm.

  10. Mike says:

    Where can I get one of those smoker tubes?

    1. Hey Grill Hey says:

      Amazon has a really good selection

    2. Bjorn says:

      I’m sure this isn’t going to help Mike from 3 years ago, but for anyone else reading: I just use a little wire basket I had lying around, for sorting pens and stuff in a drawer, it’s about 8-10″ long, 3″ wide and 3″ deep. You could probably find one at any store in the office or organizer section for waaay cheaper than the smoke tubes. I fill it full of bbq pellets and start it on one end with a propane torch (it takes a bit to get it going. I was finding that it would burn out so I started propping it up at about a 45 degree angle with the lit end on the bottom- now it smokes for a couple hours nice and cold so you don’t melt your cheese! You could literally do this in a cardboard box if you wanted.