Ultra-creamy smoked mac and cheese earns its place at the table because it gives you two textures in one pan: a silky, rich cheese sauce tucked around every noodle and a crisp, bronzed top that cracks when you spoon through it. The smoker adds a gentle wood-kissed finish that makes the whole dish taste built for barbecue, not just parked beside it.
The trick is balancing the sauce so it stays smooth after the long smoke. Whole milk and cream give the base enough body to hold up, while sharp cheddar brings the bite and Gouda melts into that lush, stretchy finish that makes each forkful feel extra full. A disposable aluminum pan helps the cheese sauce heat evenly and keeps cleanup easy, which matters when the rest of the meal already has enough moving parts.
Below, you’ll find the one timing detail that keeps the topping crisp instead of soggy, plus a few swaps that still give you a sturdy, crowd-pleasing pan of mac and cheese.
The sauce stayed creamy after smoking and the panko topping got that perfect crunch without drying out the pasta. I used sharp cheddar and Gouda like suggested, and the flavor was spot on for our BBQ.
Smoked mac and cheese with a crisp panko top is the BBQ side that disappears first.
The Part Most People Miss When They Smoke Mac and Cheese
The biggest mistake with smoked mac and cheese is treating the smoker like an oven and expecting the sauce to stay unchanged for 90 minutes. It won’t if the sauce is too thin to begin with. You want the cheese sauce a little looser than your final ideal because the pasta keeps absorbing liquid while it sits in the smoker.
The other thing that matters is the top. Panko mixed with melted butter gives you a crust that stays crisp long enough to cut through, while regular breadcrumbs can turn dusty or dense. Keep the smoker at 225°F so the cheese melts through without boiling hard at the edges. If the pan is bubbling aggressively, the heat is too high and the sauce will start to separate around the sides before the center is ready.
What the Cheddar, Gouda, and Cream Are Each Doing Here

- Sharp cheddar — This is the backbone of the flavor. Buy it in a block and shred it yourself if you can, because pre-shredded cheese is coated with starch and won’t melt as smoothly.
- Gouda — Gouda brings the silky melt and that mellow, smoky-friendly flavor that cheddar alone can’t give. If you need a substitute, smoked Gouda works, but it pushes the smoke flavor harder and can take over the dish.
- Whole milk and heavy cream — This combination keeps the sauce rich enough to survive the smoker without turning grainy. Using all milk makes the sauce thinner; using all cream can make it feel heavy before the cheese even goes in.
- Panko breadcrumbs — Panko stays lighter and crunchier than standard breadcrumbs, which is exactly what you want over a pan of soft pasta. Toss it with melted butter right before topping the mac so it browns instead of drying out.
- Elbow macaroni — The curve of elbow pasta catches sauce in every bite. Cook it just until tender before it goes into the pan; if it starts out too soft, it turns mushy after the smoke time.
How to Build the Sauce So It Stays Creamy in the Smoker
Starting the Roux
Melt the butter, whisk in the flour, and cook it long enough to lose the raw flour smell. You want a smooth paste that looks a little foamy and pale, not browned. If the heat is too high, the roux can scorch and leave a bitter edge that no amount of cheese will hide.
Adding the Milk and Cream
Pour in the milk and cream gradually while whisking so the mixture stays lump-free. At first it will look thin, then it thickens as it warms and starts to coat the back of a spoon. If you dump in all the liquid at once and walk away, the flour clumps before it ever has a chance to dissolve smoothly.
Melting the Cheese Without Breaking It
Take the pan off the heat before the cheddar and Gouda go in. Cheese melts best in gentle warmth, not a hard simmer, and that is what keeps the sauce glossy instead of grainy. Stir until the sauce looks smooth and elastic, then season it before it goes into the pasta so every noodle gets seasoned from the inside out.
Smoking and Finishing
Once the pasta and sauce are in the pan, spread the panko topping evenly and slide it into the smoker. You’re looking for bubbling around the edges and a top that turns deep golden, not just pale beige. Let it rest for 10 minutes before serving so the sauce settles back into the pasta instead of running across the pan when you scoop it.
How to Adapt This Pan for Different Tables
Gluten-Free Version
Use gluten-free elbow pasta and swap the flour for a measure-for-measure gluten-free blend or cornstarch slurry. Panko-style gluten-free crumbs work for the topping, though they usually brown a little faster, so keep an eye on the last 15 minutes in the smoker.
Extra Smoky, BBQ-Style Finish
Use smoked Gouda and a stronger smoking wood if you want the cheese flavor to sit right beside the barbecue rather than underneath it. This version tastes bolder, but too much smoke can crowd out the richness, so don’t add smoked paprika unless you want the whole pan to lean heavily in that direction.
Lighter Dairy Swap
You can swap the heavy cream for half-and-half and keep the whole milk as written for a slightly lighter pan. The sauce won’t taste quite as plush, but it still holds up well if you don’t overcook it in the smoker.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The sauce will firm up as it chills, but the flavor holds well.
- Freezer: It freezes, but the texture softens a bit when thawed. Freeze in portions in airtight containers and expect the sauce to be a touch less smooth after reheating.
- Reheating: Reheat covered in a 325°F oven with a splash of milk until hot. The common mistake is blasting it uncovered in the microwave, which dries out the edges and makes the cheese look broken before the center warms through.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Groark Boys BBQ Smoked Mac and Cheese
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Prepare your smoker to 225°F using your choice of wood so it’s steady at temperature before baking the mac and cheese.
- Melt the butter in a Dutch oven over medium heat, then whisk in the flour and cook for 1-2 minutes until smooth.
- Whisk in the whole milk and heavy cream, then simmer gently for 3-5 minutes until the sauce thickens enough to coat a spoon.
- Add the sharp cheddar cheese and Gouda cheese, stirring until fully melted and smooth.
- Season the sauce with garlic powder, onion powder, and salt and pepper to taste, stirring until evenly combined.
- Stir the cooked elbow macaroni into the cheese sauce until every piece is coated.
- Transfer the mixture to a disposable aluminum pan and spread into an even layer.
- Mix the panko breadcrumbs with the melted butter, then sprinkle evenly over the top.
- Place the pan in the smoker and smoke for 60-90 minutes until the mac is bubbly and the top turns golden.
- Let the smoked mac and cheese rest for 10 minutes before serving so it sets slightly and slices cleanly.


