Smoked & Tallow-Confit Beef Cheeks

Smoked & Tallow-Confit Beef Cheeks

Servings: 4 Total Time: 8 hrs 30 mins Difficulty: Intermediate Family Friendly Family Friendly Show Stopper Show Stopper Smoke & Sear Fav. Smoke & Sear Fav.
Smoked beef cheeks confit in smoky tallow for a juicy, barked-up BBQ knockout.

Alright, let’s talk beef cheeks – underrated, full of flavour, and when done right, they’re absolute BBQ royalty. This one’s a two-stage banger: first we give the cheeks a long, slow smoke to build bark and develop deep colour. Then we drop ’em into a tray of molten beef dripping for a confit session that takes ’em to a whole new level of juicy, pull-apart goodness. We’re talking rich, sticky, unctuous meat that eats like brisket’s rebellious cousin. No binders, no gimmicks – just salt, pepper, smoke, and fat. If you’ve got a Kamado Joe, lumpwood, and some patience, this one’s gonna blow minds.

Smoked & Tallow-Confit Beef Cheeks

Prep Time 30 mins Cook Time 7 hrs Rest Time 1 hr Total Time 8 hrs 30 mins
Difficulty: Intermediate Cooking Temp: 120  C Servings: 4 Estimated Cost: £ 22 Calories: Approximately 700–800 per serving Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Ingredients

For the Beef Cheeks:

For the Seasoning:

For the Confit Fat:

Instructions

  1. Step 1: Prep & Season Like a Boss

    Start by trimming the beef cheeks – get rid of any silver skin or membrane. In a wide dish, mix your salt and pepper 1:1. Press the cheeks into the mix, coating both sides. Slap 'em together to shake off the excess – what sticks is perfect. Let the meat sit at room temp while you fire up the Kamado Joe. This method gives you solid bark with no clumping, no gluey binders – just meat and seasoning.

  2. Step 2: Kamado Setup – Low and Slow Vibes

    Load up your Kamado Joe with quality lump charcoal and 2–3 oak wood chunks for that deep smoke. Set it up for indirect cooking using the deflector plates and dial the temp in to 120°C (250°F). 

  3. Step 3: Pre-Smoke the Dripping

    Chuck a tray filled with your beef dripping into the Kamado while it's coming up to temp. Let it melt slowly and soak up a kiss of oak smoke. This is going to be your confit bath later – trust me, it’s worth the early start.

  4. Step 4: Smoke the Cheeks (~3 Hours)

    Place the cheeks straight on the grates (indirect zone), close the lid, and let the smoke do its thing. No spritzing unless the bark looks a bit dry. After about 3 hours, you want the internal temp around 70–74°C (160–165°F) and that bark nice and set. We’re not rushing – patience builds flavour.

  5. Step 5: Confit Time (~3.5–4 Hours)

    Once the cheeks are smoked up, drop them into that tray of now hot, smoky beef dripping. You want the fat covering the meat. Cover tightly with foil and bump the temp up to 135°C (275°F). Let them confit for 3.5 to 4 hours until the internal hits 95°C (203–205°F) and they probe like soft butter. If they’re not fully submerged, give them a flip halfway through.

  6. Step 6: Rest in the Fat (30–60 mins)

    Let the cheeks rest in that liquid gold for 30 to 60 minutes. They'll stay piping hot and get even more tender. Perfect if you’re waiting on your guests or sorting sides.

  7. Step 7: Slice, Shred or Smash – Just Get Stuck In

    Beef cheeks don’t play by the rules when it comes to grain – it's more like a spider web than straight lines. So don’t overthink it. The best way to slice? Go across the width, not the length, and hold your knife at a slight angle to get a nicer, cleaner cut. But here’s the truth – these things are so tender, they’ll probably shred just from looking at them. Don’t panic. That’s not a fail – that’s how good they’ve cooked.

    Slice if you want that clean presentation, shred for a pulled beef vibe, or just squash it in your palm caveman-style and pile it high. Whatever your style – it’s going to be rich, juicy and next-level tasty. Just get it in a roll, on a plate, or straight off the board . . . and enjoy every bite.

  8. Step 8: Serve It Up – The Full Smoke & Sear Spread

    Here’s what I served mine with, and let me tell you, this combo slaps. It’s the perfect mix of rich, sharp, sweet and crunchy – proper balance to the deep, fatty beef.

    • Red Pickled Onions – These bring the zing. Sharp, bright and punchy – perfect for cutting through the richness of the meat. Make a batch the day before and let them mellow in the fridge.

    • Mini Brioche Rolls – Soft, sweet and golden – ideal for building cheeky little beef sliders. The sweetness of the bread plays beautifully with the smoky meat.

    • Corn Ribs – Take whole cobs, quarter ‘em lengthways, season with smoked paprika and garlic powder, then grill until they curl up and char slightly. Finish with a hit of fresh lime juice. Sweet, smoky and tangy – crowd favourite.

    • Mac & Cheese – I used shop-bought and chucked it in the Kamado for a reheat. Let it bake until golden and bubbling on top – dead easy, proper comfort food.

    Keep it casual, serve it on boards or trays, and let everyone dive in. It's the kind of meal where people go quiet mid-bite – always a good sign.

Equipment

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Keywords: beef cheeks, smoked beef cheeks, confit beef, kamado joe beef cheeks, beef dripping, tallow confit, kamado bbq, oak smoked beef, slow cooked beef cheeks, bbq beef cheeks
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🔥 THE LAZY BUZZARDS BBQ 2026 🔥

Some weekends you enjoy . . .

Some weekends you remember.

This was definitely one of those.

Fifteen teams. Two days. Incredible food. New friendships. A bit of healthy competition . . .and an evening BBQ Olympics that had teams and judges laughing together long after the turn-ins were done.

A huge thank you to Alan & Jo for creating something that’s so much more than a BBQ competition. It’s a weekend built around great food, great people and a genuine BBQ community.

Massive respect to every team that competed too. Thanks for letting me wander around with a camera all weekend and capture what UK BBQ is really about.

This is the second BBQ competition I’ve attended now—back-to-back—and I’ve genuinely caught the bug. I’d love to shine a bigger spotlight on this side of the UK BBQ scene next year.

Could you see yourself competing one day? Let me know in the comments . . .👇🔥

#TheLazyBuzzardsBBQ #UKBBQ #BBQCompetition #LiveFireCooking #BBQCommunity
Six years ago I stepped into the UK BBQ scene.

I had no idea that buying a smoker during lockdown would completely change my life.

Since then I’ve shared 100+ free recipes, created over 1,000 pieces of content, surpassed ONE MILLION website views, welcomed 600,000+ active users to Smoke & Sear, and built social profiles, groups and communities with 70,000+ members and followers.

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Starting a business with three great lads I met through the BBQ community is genuinely a dream come true.

It’s still early days, but seeing so many FOUNDERS backing us, our rubs selling so well, and people proudly wearing FOURGE merch honestly means more than I can put into words. Pellets, fuel and plenty more are just around the corner, and I can’t wait to cook for so many of you at @meatupfestival in just a few weeks.

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I’m just one bloke trying to do his small part to help push UK BBQ forward.

Here’s to the next chapter. 🔥🇬🇧

#UKBBQ #OutdoorCooking #PassTheFlame
First time guest judging at Whole Hog 2026 with @comp_bbq_uk . . . and what a weekend🔥

Six rounds. Two days. Nine teams. A LOT of pork.

Honestly, it opened my eyes to a whole other side of UK BBQ. So much skill, creativity, graft and proper passion for cooking over fire.

Massive respect to Comp BBQ UK for building something special, and huge respect to @weberuk and cranswickplc for everything they do to support this event and help the competition BBQ scene grow.

UK BBQ is gathering serious momentum… and this definitely won’t be the last BBQ comp I attend.

Who’s ever thought about getting a few mates together and entering a BBQ team? 👀🔥

#CompBBQUK #WholeHog2026 #UKBBQ #BBQCommunity #CompetitionBBQ
This started as a daft little comp I set up in the UK BBQ WhatsApp Community to get the regional groups talking, cooking, meeting up and generally giving each other grief.

Most regions went suspiciously quiet.

But two actually stepped up.

SOUTH vs NORTH

The South came in swinging with a proper land, sea and fire feast — venison haunch wrapped in nori, reverse-seared smoked lamb, lobster, scallops, shell-on prawns, Sussex mackerel, monkfish, black sea bream, focaccia, fresh green sauce and a Sussex Smokie finished with a breadcrumb crust.

Then the North answered with an absolute monster board — rack of lamb, black pudding burnt ends with Newcastle Brown Ale sauce, sticky pork ribs, Cumberland sausage, smoked chuck scouse, fish and chips, roast beef, ribeye steaks, venison burgers, grilled potato skewers, sweet Yorkshire pudding with bone marrow crème pâtissière and smoked sticky toffee pudding with bourbon ice cream.

And honestly, this is exactly what it was meant to be about.

People getting together. Cooking outdoors. Making new mates. Sharing ideas. Having a laugh. Creating something that represents where they’re from.

But… there can only be one winner.

To vote, comment:

SOUTH

or

NORTH

I’ll somehow collate the votes from Instagram and Facebook on Monday 6th July, and we’ll find out who takes the regional glory for 2026.

More details on both cooks are on the website, and you can also join the UK BBQ WhatsApp Community there if you fancy getting involved. It really is a cracking bunch.

Now then…

Who gets the glory?

SOUTH or NORTH?
Second walk out with the Lads Project today and honestly… what a proper day.

Hot as anything, big Peak District views, Thor’s Cave, River Dove, miles in the legs, plenty of laughs and just a really good bunch of lads getting outside and doing something positive.

No pressure, no awkwardness, no forced deep chats — just fresh air, good people, proper conversation when it comes, and a reminder that getting out of your usual routine does a lot.

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DRAGON01 over Coningsby 🔥

It’s been a few weeks since I last watched Flt Lt Tom Nation put the Typhoon through its paces over RAF Coningsby — but the second I heard today’s slot announced on the NOTAM, there was absolutely no chance I was missing it.

And what a display.

I may have lost half of it to the sun, and the other half to Tom flying so low he disappeared behind the trees . . . but wow. 😂

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Huge respect to Tom and the whole Typhoon Display Team behind the scenes.

Absolutely epic.

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