This smoked Cheddar cheese recipe brings back memories of those crates from Hickory Farms that were shrink-wrapped and crammed full of small rounds of smoked cheese and sausage that. Although even as a kid, you knew the cheese could taste soooo much better. And you were right. This recipe for how to smoke cheese at home is your proof.–Renee Schettler Rossi

What To Do With Smoked Cheddar Cheese

As for what to do with your stash of smoked cheese, you can nosh on it at will, stack it on a cracker, post pictures of it on social media, melt it on a juicy burger, slip it in a patty melt, or, if you’re the unselfish sort, you can gift it to loved ones—and not just at the holidays. 

A wire basket on a wood cutting board containing several types of cheese, including smoked cheddar cheese.

Smoked Cheddar Cheese

5 / 5 votes
This smoked Cheddar cheese recipe explains, step by step, how to smoke cheese at home into smoke-imbued exquisiteness. Hickory Farms, be worried.
David Leite
CourseAppetizers
CuisineAmerican
Servings16 servings
Calories114 kcal
Prep Time5 minutes
Cook Time3 hours 55 minutes
Total Time4 hours

Equipment

  • Apple, alder, or cherry wood chunks or chips

Ingredients 

  • 2 (8-ounce) blocks Cheddar cheese* (see * below)

Instructions 

  • Set up your smoker to maintain a temperature of less than 90°F (32°C). It’s imperative that the heat be no higher than 90°F (32°C) to prevent the cheese from melting.
  • To create cold smoke, place the cheese on the grate of your smoker. Set three lit charcoal briquettes flat in the charcoal pan or firebox of your smoker. Place a flat wood chunk on top of the charcoal to create smoke. Provide a little airflow and replace the charcoal and/or wood chunks as needed to keep the smoke going for the desired period of time.
  • Place the blocks of cheese directly on the grate and apply light smoke for about 4 hours.
  • Remove the cheese from the grate and place it in a resealable plastic bag. Store the smoked cheese in the refrigerator for 2 weeks before indulging to allow the smoke flavor to permeate the cheese and even mature slightly. (If you simply can't wait 2 weeks, no one's going to tattle on you. But just know that the smoke flavor will be more pronounced and even somewhat bitter or, dare we say, acrid. If you can resist temptation, a perceived virtue that we usually find to be highly overrated, you'll be rewarded with a more mellow smoke flavor.)

Notes

*What You Need To Know About How To Make Smoked Cheese Other Than Cheddar

This smoked Cheddar cheese recipe works just as well with Gouda, Muenster, Edam, mozzarella, Swiss, and pepper Jack.
Smoking Meat Cookbook

Adapted From

Smoking Meat

Buy On Amazon

Nutrition

Serving: 1 servingCalories: 114 kcalCarbohydrates: 1 gProtein: 7 gFat: 9 gSaturated Fat: 6 gMonounsaturated Fat: 3 gCholesterol: 30 mgSodium: 176 mgSugar: 1 g

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

Tried this recipe?Mention @leitesculinaria or tag #leitesculinaria!
Recipe © 2012 Jeff Phillips. Photo © 2012 Michelle Furbacher. All rights reserved.

Recipe Testers’ Reviews

I’m so excited to have tested this. I love smoked cheese! And it’s so easy to make at home. First, if you don’t have a smoker but just a grill (gas or charcoal), you must buy an A-Maze-N-Pellet-Smoker from amazenproducts.com and talk to Todd. He’s a wealth of information.

Here were his suggestions:

1) Freeze the cheese for 2 hours before smoking, so that the cheese melts less quickly, allowing the smoke flavor to be better dispersed throughout the cheese.

2) Fill a milk carton with water and freeze it, wrap it in aluminum foil, and put it on the grate above the heat source, then place the A-Maze-N smoker next to the milk carton.

3) Place the grill grate above the lower grate and place the cheese off to the side of the smoke.

4) Don’t let the heat go above 85°F (29°C), as the cheese starts to melt a bit at 90°F (32°C). I used applewood sawdust, enough to cover 1 1/2 rows of the smoker, and lit it on one side. The directions that come with the smoker explain all this. It’s very easy.

I hung an analog meat thermometer in between the grates of the grill and closed the lid. It was only 70°F in Santa Monica, so the grill didn’t need to be shaded, but if you live where it’s really hot, you might want to put your grill in a shaded area or cover it with an outdoor umbrella. I used Gouda and goat cheese. The Gouda took about 5 hours (the recipe says 4 hours, but the smoke didn’t seem to be reaching the center of the cheese). I smoked the goat cheese for 1 hour. I tasted it right after smoking and the cheese was a little bitter.

The recipe says to refrigerate for 2 weeks to mellow out the smoke flavor. One week later, I tasted the Gouda and it was perfect. The goat cheese tastes amazing as well. This is so much fun! And now I can make my wild mushroom tartlets with applewood–smoked goat cheese and truffle oil. Great combo! Can’t wait to try more cheese and cold-smoked salmon and trout. Lots to do with this A-Maze-N smoker!

This smoked cheese was so much easier than I thought it would be, with what I’m hoping will be delicious results.

To start, I made 2 smoke pouches for the grill, one with apple chips and one with cherry chips. I had 4 blocks of marble, mozzarella, jalapeno, havarti and spiced gouda. I used a tin foil pan and several lumps of charcoal. The hardest part was getting the charcoal to light. Once that was going, I used a perforated broil pan to place half the cheese and put it on the far side of the grill. Then when the smoke was going, I closed the lid of the turned-off grill.

I waited the better part of an hour and a half before I checked and removed the cheese because the smoke pack was done and apparently so was the cheese. I think any longer it would have puddled and melted. I then put the other cheese and smoke pack to use.

I have kept a third of the cheese out to nibble while the rest matures for the 2 weeks. What I wound up with is a delicately smoked product (I’d call it cold-smoked) cheese that will be delicious with the full 2 weeks maturity.




About David Leite

I count myself lucky to have received three James Beard Awards for my writing as well as for Leite’s Culinaria. My work has also appeared in The New York Times, Martha Stewart Living, Saveur, Bon Appétit, Gourmet, Food & Wine, Yankee, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post, and more.


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22 Comments

  1. Hi. I have attached a double doored fridge/freezer ( upright) onto the side of my house with a lean to roof over it. i gutted the ice maker and all of the wiring etc and left the fan in. i purchased two hot plates and use them on the bottom of the fridge, either side. for cheese i just place ice in containers on the first rack. for ventilation i have drilled holes into the bottom of the fridge and the top. to allow air in and out. i can do salmon and jerky on both sides.

    now, my question is this: i have googled and googled , and can’t find out anything about air drying the cheese first on racks with a fan behind it to form a pellicle to allow the smoke to adhere to the cheese. most websites just say fix up your smoker and put the ice in and lay your cheese in and fire away. the smoke will not even permeate the cheese this way, and if it does, it takes forever. it is the same principle as salmon. air drying it before smoking it, isn’t it??

    cheers, Geoff Officer

    1. Hey Geoff, I’m not a smoking expert. That being said, pellicle develops because the protein surface (of the meat, fish, etc.) has been cured and is then air-dried. The cheese has no cure on it, so there’s nothing to dry and become tacky. I think the trick will be to find some sort of a solution to rub over the cheese that then it can evaporate, leaving the surface tacky. Also, using cheese that is cut from the inside of the block will give you a better smoke than, say, a round of cheese that already has a skin from aging. Does that make sense?

      1. I cold smoke cheese, nuts, etc. Using a cold smoke generator. It’s cold, no heat, no chance of melting cheese. No need to freeze, no need for ice.

  2. I have a Cameron Stove top smoker….do you think I’ll have the same success using it as the others mentioned?

    1. Yup, I do, Ginny. I have a Camerons and I loooove it. I haven’t smoked cheese in it, but I’ve no doubt that you can. Probably best, anytime you’re adapting a recipe for a regular smoker to be made in your Camerons, to read the instruction manual and to do a little Googling to see if anyone has any advice. I just looked up the instruction manual online and within the first few pages it gives you the recommended time for cheese. Let us know how it goes!

  3. Buy a cheap soldering iron less then $10 at Walmart, a tin can, and wood chips. Voila, a cold smoker maker for cheap. Throw it in the bbq and away you go. Shouldn’t get higher than outside temp, easy to achieve in northern BC.