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Smoked Filet Mignon (Beef Filet) Wrapped in Bacon

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This smoked filet mignon is smoked steak at it's finest and unlike the sear first and then cook to the desired temperature method that is often used, I recommend smoking it at low temperature until it reaches the desired temperature then sear it after the cook. This cut is often wrapped in bacon for flavor and extra fat (since it has little fat marbling on it's own) but it is filet mignon nonetheless, with or without the bacon.

I am a bacon lover and I don't miss opportunities to use  bacon in my cooking– I obviously chose to wrap the smoked beef filet steaks in bacon;-)

Helpful Information
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Dry Brine Time: 2 hours
  • Cook Time: 1 hour
  • Smoker Temp: 225°F (107°C)
  • Meat Finish Temp: 130°F (54°C)
  • Recommended Wood: Oak
What You'll Need
  • Filet mignon steaks (1 per person + 1 or 2 extra)
  • Kosher salt
  • Thin cut bacon (1 slice per)
  • Toothpicks
  • Olive oil
  • Jeff's Texas style rub
Step 1: Dry Brine the Beef

You can safely omit this step if you are on a low sodium diet but dry brining adds a ton of flavor to steaks, chops and other lean meats and I highly recommend at least trying it.

Dry brining is simply a method by which we sprinkle kosher salt onto meat. The salt draws moisture to the surface where it mixes with the salt and is then absorbed back into the meat. It's a lot of science that you don't have to understand in order to know that it works very well to season the inside of meat such as these beef filet steaks and turn them into the best smoked beef filet mignon you've ever tasted.

Most chefs recommend ½ teaspoon of kosher salt per pound of meat and you can certainly weigh the steaks and measure the salt precisely if you prefer but I usually just go by looks. You can look at the image below to get a a good idea of the kosher salt coverage that I recommend.

Place the steaks on a cooling rack, a pan with a rack or even just a plate if that's all you have and coat the top side only** with kosher salt according to the recommendation above.

**Note: This is not to say you couldn't dry brine both side if you wanted to.. this would simply require you to brine the top side first then flip the steaks over and repeat the salting and fridge time on that side as well.

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Place the steaks in the fridge for two hours to let the magic happen. When the time is up, remove them from the fridge and continue with step 2 below

Note: There is no need to rinse the steaks when they are finished brining.

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Step 2: Wrap in Bacon (Optional)

When purchasing bacon for wrapping these, it is usually best to use bacon that is on the thinner side. To make sure you get the thinnest bacon, count the slices per pound in the package you are looking to purchase and look for ones that have at least 15 to 16 slices per pound.

To wrap the filet steaks in bacon, lay a strip of bacon flat on the cutting board.

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Place one of the steaks vertically on top of the bacon. Hold the front edge of the bacon against the steak as you roll it, wrapping the steak with bacon. When you reach the end of the bacon, secure with a toothpick.

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Repeat this process for all of the steaks.

Step 3: Season Lightly with Rub

Apply a thin coat of olive oil to the top side of the beef filet steaks and sprinkle a light coat of Jeff's Texas style rub on top.

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The soon-to-be smoked filet mignon is now ready for the smoker.

Step 4: Set Up Smoker

Set up your smoker for cooking at about 225°F (107°C) using indirect heat. If your smoker has a water pan, fill it up. For smoke, I recommend oak but you can also use whatever you have.

If you have the Woodwind pellet smoker by Camp Chef, then you are in for a real treat but this recipe will work on any smoker as long as you can maintain the proper temperature.

Step 5: Smoke the Steaks

You can cook these directly on the smoker grate or you can use a pan with a rack to make them easy to move in and out of the smoker and to reduce cleanup.

Expect these steaks to take around an hour but actual cook time depends greatly on, meat thickness, how cold the meat is, the outside temperature, how well your smoker maintains temperature and how often you open the door.

I HIGHLY recommend using a leave-in thermometer for these so you'll know exactly when they are done. A handheld thermometer like the Thermapen also works well if you watch them carefully.

I recommend medium rare for these or about 130°F (54°C) in the center. Just as soon as they hit this temperature, remove them from the heat immediately.

Step 6: Let Them Cool Down

When the smoked filet mignon steaks are finished cooking, they are ready to eat but you can take a few extra steps and make them even better including searing the outside and putting a little sizzle on the bacon.

Step 7: Torch the Bacon

I decided to cook the bacon further with my handheld torch right away and then let the steaks cool down for a few minutes before I did the finishing sear on them so as to not raise the heat beyond their finish temperature.

To do this, I simply held the flame of the torch just close enough to the bacon to make it sizzle moving it slowly all the way around the steaks. Try not to catch the toothpick on fire!

Step 8: Hot Sear

Once all of the bacon is crisped up, fire up the grill or a screaming hot skillet and give each side of the steaks a little sear. I like the way grill marks look but as far as flavor and quality goes, they are overrated. Feel free to brown the entire top and bottom surface of the steaks in a skillet.

Step 9: Serve Immediately

Serve the smoked filet mignon as each one gets done getting its final sear and watch for some very happy faces.

4.8 from 9 votes

Smoked Filet Mignon (Beef Filet) Wrapped in Bacon

This smoked filet mignon is smoked steak at it's finest and unlike the sear first and then cook to the desired temperature method that is often used, I recommend smoking it at low temperature until it reaches the desired temperature then sear it after the cook. This cut is often wrapped in bacon for flavor
Prep Time20 minutes
Cook Time1 hour
Total Time1 hour 20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4-6 beef mignon steaks
  • 2 TBS kosher salt
  • 4-6 toothpicks
  • 4-6 slices bacon (Thin sliced)
  • 2 TBS olive oil
  • 2 TBS Jeff's Texas style rub

Instructions

  • Sprinkle approximately 1/8 teaspoon of kosher salt on the top of each steak and place tray of steaks in the fridge for 2 hours.
  • Remove steaks from fridge (no rinsing required) when they are finished brining.
  • Wrap a piece of bacon around the outside edge of each steak and secure with a toothpick.
  • Apply a light coat of olive oil and a light sprinkling of Jeff's Texas style rub to each steak.
  • Set up smoker for cooking at 225°F (107°C) using indirect heat. If your smoker uses a water pan, fill it up.
  • Once the smoker is ready, place the meat on the smoker grates and let them smoke cook for approximately 1 hour or until the steaks reach an internal temperature of 130°F (54°C) (medium rare).
  • When the steaks are finished cooking, remove them from the smoker grate and let them cool for about 10-15 minutes. After cooling for a few minutes, sear the top and bottom of each steak on a very hot grill or in a screaming hot skillet. Leave them in the skillet only long enough to brown the meat. Do not let them burn.
  • As an option, you can use a handheld torch to crisp the bacon on the outside of each steak since 1 hour isn't long enough to do that in the smoker.
  • Serve immediately.

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Recipe Rating




12 Comments

  1. I have been wanting to try smoking filet mignons on my traeger smoker, but as you know most traegers if any have an indirect option. What do you suggest sir if I do not have an indirect option. I have grilled my filets indirectly and directly and they were outstanding accordingly to the wife. I’d like to hear your suggestions if you have some. Thanks.

    1. Tracey, I’m not sure I’m understanding your question completely, but I’ll give it a shot:

      I typically lay them on a pan with a rack when cooking them in my pellet smokers. I cook them at around 225°F until they reach about 100 to 110°F then give them a quick sear on the grill or hot griddle until they reach medium rare or about 128°F.

      In my opinion, this is the best of both worlds. You can also just lay the filet directly on the grate and it’s indirect enough because of the drip pan between the burn pot and grate.

      Let me know if any of this needs to be clarified or if you have further questions.

  2. I found that 135 degrees internal was much too rare for our taste. I put them back on the grill and finished them (not the smoker). Next time I will take the internal temperature to 150 while on the smoker.

  3. 5 stars
    Looks like a great recipe that I’ll use while my daughter is visiting from her adopted home in the UK. What I really wanted to comment on was the little man behind you. Little doubt who HIS Daddy is, eh? At least he certainly looks like you. Thanks for all of the help over the years, Jeff! You’re a valuable member of the BBQ community!

    Sincerely,

    -Ric Rowe
    Jacksonville, Illinois

    1. Ric, Thank you so much for the kind words and I think your daughter will love the filet! The little man is my youngest grandson.. he likes to put on my glasses and say, “look, I’m Papi” (what they call me)😀

  4. 5 stars
    My first smoke on my new Masterbuilt 560 were these filets and followed Jeff’s recipe without the dry brining. I just was too impatient. They were the best filet steaks ever! I also put some extra bacon on a pan with brown suger and smoked the 57 minutes,…candied bacon AMAZING!
    Thanks for the great recipies you obviously know what you are talking about.

  5. So I can plan the meal times, how long typically does it take to flame each filet’s bacon? I use a “plumber’s torch” versus the little creme brule torch.

  6. 5 stars
    I smoked and seared two filets last night. They were fabulous. I will stop the smoking at 125 degrees next time, then with the quick sear they will be perfects for me.

  7. 5 stars
    I tried making them last night for Valentine’s day, but it got too cold outside – below 30°F – and my smoker couldn’t get above 150°F. My wood chips never ignited.

    So I took them out and finished them on the grill. Then I took them inside and hit the bacon with my big-ass propane torch – the kind you use for plumbing, not the little toys you use for crême brulée.

    Even without the smoke, they were the best filets I ever had – juicy and tasty. I don’t order filet in restaurants because they just don’t have much taste to them. I’m convinced the dry brining, the rub, and the bacon made all the difference.

    Thanks!

  8. I use to cook flirts on the grill. Then I switched to the lava hot skillet.

    This is the only way to go. I’ve never had a better filet. The flavor is amazing. Follow Jeff’s recipe to the letter and enjoy a little piece of Heaven on Earth.