Stuffed Pork Loin Smoked on a Kamado Grill
by BBQGuys Staff
Prep Time:
20 mins
Cook Time:
75 mins
Total Time:
95 mins
Learn how to prepare a stuffed pork loin that has been smoked on a kamado grill. The melted brie cheese is perfectly complemented by the smoky bacon and pineapple bits.
Ingredients
Ingredients for Pork Loin
- 4-6 lb Pork loin
- 1 whole pineapple
Ingredients for Stuffing Mixture
- ½ lb applewood-smoked bacon, roughly chopped (cooked half-way)
- ½ cup fresh sage leaves, roughly chopped
- ¼ cup fresh parsley, roughly chopped
- ¼ cup orange bell pepper, roughly chopped
- ½ lb brie, diced
- 1 cup fresh pineapple, roughly chopped
- Cracked black pepper, to taste
- Coarse salt, to taste
Ingredients for Sauce
- Grilled pineapple, diced
- 5 Tbsp unsalted butter
- 2-3 Tbsp brandy
Items You'll Need
Instructions
- Mix all of your stuffing ingredients into a large mixing bowl and lightly coat your pineapple toppers with some black pepper and salt
- Butterfly cut your roast, fat side down, and coat both sides of your pork loin with salt and pepper (Cayenne pepper optional)
- Evenly spread your stuffing mixture out, leaving space around the edges, and roll your loin.
- Crosshatch some shallow slices across the top and tie your roast up with kitchen twine.
- Place in 325°F kamado that has been set up for indirect cooking and add pineapple toppers
- After 35 minutes, move pineapple domes to the edges so the center will brown
- 25 minutes later, flip pork loin, remove pineapple domes and open all dampers to finish roast
- To make sauce, whisk ingredients into a pan over medium-high heat. Remove once butter is melted.
- Remove pork loin when internal temperature reaches 135-140°F.
- After resting 15 minutes, slice into rings, top with sauce, serve and enjoy!






























































































































Do It Yourselfshouldn't mean,
Do It Alone.

























































































butterflypoultry to more evenly roast, grill, or smoke a whole chicken or turkey.

Holy Trinityand beyond, Chef Kenneth Temple teaches the facts about our misunderstood cuisine.




I'm out to inspire mouthwatering food, cooked simply but masterfully from everyday ingredients. And my culinary approach is all about showcasing world cuisine through a New Orleans lens.

Now, my goal is always to empower people, and be approachable to people — and from the inside looking out, I've seen for myself that Weber really embraces that ethos.

Diva QBennett
Ask me anything about meat. Anything. Grilled, smoked, stewed, roasted, broiled, baked, braised, stir-fried, smothered, stuffed, dry aged, wet aged… should I go on? Because I can.

For all the interest and accolades that anyone has for me, I owe 100% to the women who raised me. Thanks to them, today I'm the proud owner of Philips Barbecue Co., and runner-up for Netflix's American BBQ Showdown


























Diva QBennett Let me tell it to you, as straight as I take my bourbon: I've been living the barbecue lifestyle for a long time now. Ever since the week I judged my first competition in 2006.


Oh, this person's trying to tell me something and I can hear it!






























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