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Well. I smoked another meatloaf, and while I followed Chef Boy Arnie’s recipe, I changed it enough so I made a separate thread with pictures.
I wanted to try something a little different again, so I went with the meatloaf with ground beef and mild Italian sausage. A few different ingredients and wound up with something quite tasty. I made 2 loaves…each exceeding 3 lbs so I could, once again, vac seal one and freeze it for a later time. Here's the recipe:

3 lbs mild Italian Sausage (loose, extracted sausage from casings)
3 lbs ground beef-93% lean (lean cause of sausage)
1 large red onion (coarsely chopped)
2 Tbsp garlic powder
4 eggs
2 Tbsp Canadian Steak seasoning
4 oz ketchup
4 oz Big Bob Gibson’s Red Sauce (any you like)
2 oz Memphis rub (use your own)
1 cup Italian bread crumbs
8 oz Italian 4 cheese mix

Mix the ingredients thoroughly, form into 2 loaves, and place them on a single broiler/cookie type sheet (Pam or such is a good idea here) with holes in it so the smoke can get to the underside of the meatloaf and fat drippings can escape. Here’s a picture just before they went into the smoker:



Throw the sheets with the loaves into a 210* preheated smoker (2 oz hickory, 2 oz white oak or your choice) until internal temp hits 150*. Here they are fresh from the smoker:



Let the meat loaf rest for 20 minutes and coat the top/sides of the meat loaves with Big Bob Gibson’s Red (or sauce of your choice). Here coated before their visit back to the smoker:



Then throw them into a 250* preheated smoker for apprx. 20 minutes to set the outside of the meatloaves. Let them rest for 10 minutes and slice:



Very very good. They finished with a tasty, smokey barbecue flavor. Nice consistency...the hamburger meat and sausage melded well. I must be getting
anesthetized to the smoke flavor cause I mentioned to Mrs. Pags that I thought it could use more smoke flavor, and she said, "Are you kidding? The smoke flavor was strong. Right on. But no more."

If you recall from a previous post, I was going to incorporate horseradish into this endeavor, but I forgot until too late. Horseradish flavored meatloaf will have to wait for another time.
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See the crud, er, seepage next to the meatloaf in the second picture. I couldn't tell if it was melted cheese, fat or both. The liquid was all over both meatloaves when I first took them out of the smoker. Used a paper towel or two to soak it up.

No problem. Tasted great. Just making people aware. Guess I could try high melt cheese next time to see what happens.
I use Frogmats when smoking meatloaf. Allows all that "goo" to drip out. I don't wrap the meatloaf up in a roll, just form the meatloaf in a loaf pan then flip the pan over and the formed loaf comes out onto the Frogmat. I use a quarter sheet pan, place a grill over it, place a frogmat over the grill, then place the meatloat on the Frogmat.

We devour smoked meatloaf. We like it better warmed up the next day (if we can wait that long).

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