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Learn MoreLooking for inspiration for your next meal? Explore the best pellet grill recipes that let you grill, smoke, braise, bake, roast, and BBQ.
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Take your grilling to the next level with bold new Traeger recipes added every week. Explore fresh ideas from our Traeger Kitchen and brand ambassadors, ranging from smoked meats to flavorful sides. We've got everything you need to fire up the ultimate backyard feast and impress your guests.
It's hard not to love chicken lollipops. They not only look fun but are easier to eat than conventional drumsticks. Once you learn how to shape them, you can try flavoring them different ways as would would chicken wings. We like the heat the hot sauce adds to traditional BBQ flavor, but you can lessen the amount or leave it out altogether.
Our Smoked Chicken Cobb Salad brings all the classic flavors to the grill. It features tender, smoked chicken, crispy bacon, and rich avocado, all topped with a savory bacon vinaigrette. This salad is the perfect balance of smoky and savory, with fresh ingredients in every bite.
Crispy, smoky, and downright bloomin’ delicious, this Smoke Fried Blooming Onion is the ultimate upgrade to a steakhouse classic. Smoked low and slow on a Traeger for deep, wood-fired flavor, then flash-fried to golden perfection, every petal is packed with irresistible crunch and spice. Dip it in a zesty sauce, and you’ve got an appetizer that’s smokin’ hot in all the right ways!
Go full ham with our from-scratch holiday ham recipe. We start with an 8-day brown sugar brine before letting it cure in the fridge. Then, give your ham a nice coating of our Pork & Poultry rub and let it cook low n’ slow on the Traeger. While the ham cooks, it’s time to get the homemade pineapple-chipotle glaze simmering for the perfect sweet finish.
We’re taking the popular potato technique and applying it to savory kielbasa for an easy sheet pan dinner that’s guaranteed to impress. Our Hasselback kielbasa recipe both amps up the flavor by exposing more surface area to soak up the honey-mustard glaze and maximizes the crispy factor
Pulled chicken (also called shredded chicken) is as versatile as pulled pork, maybe even more so. Toss some with your favorite Traeger BBQ sauce and serve it with slaw for a classic sandwich. Or use it to make chicken tacos, chili, nachos, burritos, and more. A stand mixer make the shredding quick and easy.
Celebrate Mardi Gras right with a hearty pot of homemade gumbo. This authentic Cajun recipe comes from our friends at Journey South Outfitters and is the perfect dish for a wood-fired flavor infusion. Go big—double this recipe, divide the leftovers into portions, and freeze for an easy, comforting meal anytime.
Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with hearty short ribs braised in Guinness and cozy potato and cabbage colcannon cakes to soak up all that brothy goodness. Cookbook author Dennis Prescott walks you through his comforting, slow-cooked recipe inspired by flavors from the Emerald Isle. Need something to do while your short ribs braise on the Traeger till fall-off-the-bone tender? Dennis says just grab a pint.
Transform last night’s leftovers into an epic breakfast worth waking for. Our pulled pork breakfast tacos are loaded with eggs, potatoes, and melty cheddar cheese and wrapped up in a flour tortilla. Dish these out for game day or a hearty breakfast any day of the week.
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Our famously easy 321 ribs will make your rib game the envy of the neighborhood. This super simple recipe takes all the confusion out of making baby back ribs without sacrificing any of the flavor. You'll begin this method by smoking your ribs for 3 hours, then cooking inside foil for 2 hours. Finish by removing your ribs from the foil, brushing on BBQ sauce, and then cook for another hour.
German Smoked Traeger Pulled Pork Recipe
Learn to cook steak like a pro with this expert guide to achieving the perfect medium-rare. Discover the secrets to measuring steak doneness, selecting the perfect cut, and resting it for maximum flavor.
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Indulge in Traeger's selection of taco recipes bursting with flavorful fillings and vibrant toppings
Truly authentic tacos al pastor are near impossible to make in a home kitchen, unless it’s equipped with a spinning vertical spit. That’s because the dish originated with immigrants from Lebanon to Mexico who took their method for cooking shawarma and applied it to tacos, replacing the lamb with pork in the process. Yet this easy, weeknight-friendly preparation hits many of the same notes with spices like cumin and cinnamon, heat from canned chipotles, and bright and sweet pineapple. This makes enough for about 24 street-size tacos; leftovers will keep a couple days covered and refrigerated.
Barbacoa, beef that’s slowly smoked and then braised until meltingly tender and flavored with chipotle and other spices, makes a delicious filling for tacos. Though beef cheek is a traditionally used cut, you can sub chuck roast for it; just cut it into strips about 4 inches long and 2 inches across.
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Inspired by birria tacos, these braised chicken tacos get dipped in a spicy enchilada sauce before a turn on the griddle. Crisped chicken skin (aka cracklins) adds welcome crunch to the filling. Serve these up with some rice, beans, and Mexican beer for the full cantina experience at home.
Chef JRob describes his sweet brunch dish as a cross between French toast and cheesecake. Yet the cream cheese and blueberry filling could not be easier to make, and the large surface area of the flat top lets you cook all the brioche at once so everyone can eat at the same time.
We’re taking the classic smashed burger up a notch with porcini powder and a special sauce. The dried mushroom powder, sometimes called dust, gives the meat an even deeper savory flavor. If your supermarket carries dried porcinis but not powder, simply grind the whole dried mushrooms in a spice grinder. Spreading a little mayo on the buns before toasting them makes them nicely browned and crisped.
Diva Q makes this fantastical, many-layered cake for her kids, who request it often for breakfast (and just about any other time of day). Once you try it, you will know why. For best results, let the crepe batter rest for at least a couple of hours but preferably overnight.
Boneless, skinless chicken thighs are a great choice for cooking on the griddle. As convenient and quick cooking as chicken breast, they have a deeper flavor and are more forgiving so they’re almost guaranteed to stay juicy after cooking. We like the heat the jalapeño ribs provide. If that’s not your thing, cut the seeds ribs out of the slices. Depending on how filled you like your fajitas, you may have extra vegetables; if so, save them to use in omelets or on pizza.
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