Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (2024)

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (1)Recipes

This bone marrow butter uses smoked beef marrow bones, as well as smoked shallots and smoked puréed garlic to create an incredible compound butter that packs an almighty flavor punch. It’s perfect for adding into sauces, stocks, gravies, or for melting over boiled veg or resting steaks.

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (2)

Written by:Mark Jenner

Last Updated: January 10, 2024

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Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (3)

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So, we’re back for another dose of food heaven with today’s recipe of Smoked Bone Marrow Butter, and it is one of those things that’s so good, you’ll wonder why you’ve not done it before.

Trust me, after trying this recipe, you’ll be hooked.

Bone marrow is an amazing treat with a rich, velvety texture and complex flavor that is best served with grilled meats, which is handy because that’s what a lot of this site is about. But you can also use it to spread on a breakfast crostini, stuff burgers, or stir into sauces. It’s also perfect for spreading on toast.

Bone marrow is traditionally roasted, but in this recipe, we’re going to smoke it before making it into a compound butter because after trying it, I’m not sure if I’ve ever tasted a better compound butter to melt over resting steaks than this one.

Contents (Jump to Topic)

  • 1 What is Bone Marrow
  • 2 What Does Bone Marrow Taste Like
  • 3 How to Use Smoked Bone Marrow Butter
  • 4 How to Make Bone Marrow Butter
  • 5 Forming Logs for Later Use
  • 6 Smoked Bone Marrow Butter Recipe
    • 6.1 Description
    • 6.2 Ingredients
    • 6.3 Instructions
    • 6.4 Notes
    • 6.5 Did you make this recipe?

What is Bone Marrow

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (4)

Bone marrow is the soft, jelly-like substance found in the hollow cavities of some bones. It is composed mainly of fat and hematopoietic (blood-forming) cells.

Bone marrow has many functions, including acting as a storehouse for minerals such as iron, calcium, and phosphate, and serves as an energy source for red blood cells in the body.

It’s for these highly nutritious reasons that bone marrow is traditionally consumed as a food, as well as its rich protein and fat content.

What Does Bone Marrow Taste Like

Bone marrow tastes like the ‘essence’ of beef, like a condensed down substance removed from beef that is responsible for beef’s flavor.

It is rich and fatty, dark in color, a little hit of sweetness from the fat, with hints of earthy flavor, but oh so very meaty and buttery.

How to Use Smoked Bone Marrow Butter

Bone marrow butter is traditionally paired with hot toast, spread liberally, and topped off with a few sea salt flakes.

But It’s also a great alternative to butter on vegetables such as asparagus, sweetcorn, or steamed broccoli as it has that rich unctuousness of fat. You’ll find it especially tasty atop roasted cauliflower or mixed as an addition to mashed potatoes.

It can also be used in sauces and sautés or whisked into gravy to add depth and shine.

But easily, my favorite way to use it is melted over grilled or smoked beef dishes while resting. Perfect for spreading across a thick, medium-rare resting steak to add an extra kick of flavor.

How to Make Bone Marrow Butter

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (5)

Soak your marrow bones in salted water for between 12 and 24 hours to remove any blood, which will discolor the end product and make it look less appetizing. This isn’t a necessary step, but I recommend it for appearance’s sake.

Remove the butter from the fridge one hour before you wish to make the bone marrow butter to allow it to come up to room temperature and soften, making it easier to work with.

Set up your grill for indirect heat smoke roasting at approximately 300 F.

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (6)

Because we’ll only be smoking for a short time, use a stronger tasting wood such as oak or hickory.

Also, because some fat will render out of the marrow bones, use a pan or a tray to catch these drippings for putting back into the mix at the end. We do not want to waste this flavorful liquid!

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (7)

When the grill is up to temp, place your marrow bone canoes onto the grates over the drip pan, and also roast the garlic cloves and the shallots alongside, after mixing a knob of butter into the shallots to help them cook and take on more smoke flavor also.

Remove the shallots when cooked through and translucent, and remove the bone marrow when it’s cooked and soft throughout, approximately 45 minutes at 300 F.

Also See

  • Wild garlic and bone marrow butter recipe
  • Wild garlic compound butter recipe
Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (8)

Now scrape out all the bone marrow canoes into a bowl and allow it to cool for a good 20 minutes, so it doesn’t melt the butter on contact. At the same time, purée the roasted garlic.

Next, add all the ingredients to a mixing bowl, bone marrow, butter, garlic, shallots, lemon zest, salt and pepper, and the drippings collected from the roasted marrow bones.

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (9)

Mix well using either a fork or, as I prefer to a wire balloon whisk. I’ve used both methods and get the best results when using a whisk, but it’s up to you, and either will work.

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (10)

Now place into the fridge for a good 15 minutes or more to firm up slightly, to make instant use or rolling into logs for later use easier.

It’s now ready, and you can either use it right away or form it into logs for refrigeration or freezing for later use.

Forming Logs for Later Use

To form the bone marrow butter into logs, roll out a 30 cm piece of cling film. Then spoon the butter mix onto the cling film, a few centimeters from the front edge.

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (11)

Take the front edge of the cling film and wrap it tightly up over the butter mix.

Now take each end of the cling film in your hands, and roll the butter in the cling film back and forth until you have formed a log shape with the butter firmed wrapped up.

Tie a knot in each end, making sure to squeeze out any air as you go before cutting off any excess.

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (12)

You can now store the log(s) for up to a week in the fridge, or freeze it for up to 6 months.

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Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (13)

Smoked Bone Marrow Butter Recipe

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5 from 1 review

  • Author: Mark Jenner
  • Total Time: 1 hour
  • Yield: 15 portions 1x
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Description

A bone marrow butter made from smoked beef marrow, smoked shallots and garlic, with lemon zest, salt and pepper.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 2 bone marrow shafts
  • 250g unsalted butter, softened
  • 75g shallots, thinly diced
  • 3 cloves of garlic
  • Zest of 1/2 a lemon
  • 2 tsp sea salt
  • 1 tsp cracked black pepper

Instructions

  1. Soak the marrow bones in salted water for between 12 and 24 hours to remove any blood
  2. Remove the butter from the fridge one hour before you start to soften it.
  3. Set up your grill for indirect heat smoke roasting at approximately 300 F. Use a stronger tasting wood such as oak or hickory. And use a pan to catch the marrow bone drippings for adding back later.
  4. Place the chopped shallots into a cooking dish with a knob of butter, ready for smoke roasting.
  5. When the grill is up to temp, place the marrow bones on the grates over the drip pan, and the garlic cloves and the shallots alongside.
  6. After 20 minutes, stir the shallots.
  7. After 45 minutes, remove everything from the grill.
  8. Scrape out the bone marrow canoes and allow it to cool for 20 minutes.
  9. Purée the roasted garlic.
  10. Add all the ingredients to a mixing bowl and combine thoroughly using either a fork or a whisk.
  11. It’s now ready. You can use it right away, or form it into logs for storage and later use.

Forming Logs for Later Use

  1. Roll out a 30 cm piece of cling film, then spoon the butter mix onto the cling film a few centimeters from the front edge.
  2. Take the front edge of the cling film and wrap it tightly up over the butter mix.
  3. Take each end of the cling film in your hands, and roll the butter in the cling film back and forth until you have formed a log shape.
  4. Tie a knot in each end, making sure to squeeze out any air as you go before cutting off any excess.
  5. You can now store the compound butter log for up to a week in the fridge, or freeze it for up to 6 months.

Notes

Add some chili flakes for a quick kick of heat, or add herbs of your liking such as rosemary, thyme or parsley, whichever mix takes your fancy, with a teaspoon of each being about right.

  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 45 minutes
  • Category: condiment, seasonings
  • Method: smoking, BBQ
  • Cuisine: American, British
Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (14)

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Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (15)

Written By: Mark Jenner

I'm a BBQ fanatic and have been barbecuing and grilling since 2005. I founded FoodFireFriends in 2017 and have extensively written for the site since.

I love cooking outdoors over live fire and smoke whatever the weather, and I currently own over 30 grills and smokers of all varieties that I frequently cook on to produce epic food.

My goal with this site is to help as many people as possible enjoy and be good at doing the same.

Leave a Comment

  1. Had this at a restaurant on a New York strip. Dude, this is the best steak I have ever had. Just wish I could find bones to make my own.

    Reply

    1. Hi David. It just makes for the best steak, doesn’t it? I love it! You should be able to ask your local butcher, and they will source marrow bones for you. I’ve never known a butcher not be able to get them.

      Reply

  2. That looks delicious!!
    I use the bones from elk and deer, what would be the proportions of marrow to butter?
    Thanks for sharing.

    Reply

    1. Hi Jerome. I’ve never actually weighed the marrow, I just always use two marrow canoes, and they can vary in size. I’m preparing some next week, I shall weigh it then and update the recipe.

      Reply

    2. Hey Jerome,

      What are elk and deer bone marrow like? How do they taste in comparison to beef? Thanks!

      Reply

Bone Marrow Butter Recipe — Smoked for an Insane Flavor Profile (2024)

FAQs

What flavors go well with bone marrow? ›

Use other bitter or assertive greens besides parsley such as watercress and arugula, and pair with thinly sliced radishes. Onion, shallot or garlic confit. Or onion, shallot, or garlic marmalade. A jam-like aromatic is great to have on hand for a number of things, not just marrow.

What does bone marrow butter taste like? ›

Bone marrow has a rich nutty flavour and delightfully compliments a good butter so a great opportunity to develop a rich 'baste' for some beautiful steak as you can see above! At its simplest bone marrow butter is a mix of roast bone marrow and butter.

How to make bone marrow taste good? ›

The key to nailing roasted marrow bones is to be aggressive, both with your seasoning and roasting temperature. You really want to give them a good dusting of salt before cooking, the same way you would a thick, marbled rib eye. Remember: The fattier the cut, the more salt it needs to let the flavor shine through.

What temperature should you smoke at bone? ›

Let the T-bone steak come to room temperature. Rub the salt and pepper on the surface, making sure you cover the sides as well. 3. Place the steak in the smoker and let it smoke at 225 degrees F for around 45 minutes to an hour.

Does smoking affect bone marrow? ›

Interestingly, it has been shown that the amount of cigarettes smoked inversely correlates with the number of bone marrow derived progenitor cells, the number of which increase rapidly following smoking cessation [7, 16].

What is the flavor profile of bone marrow? ›

It has a rich, slightly sweet flavor with a smooth texture and is often served alongside toast or used as a base for soup. Bone marrow can also be used to make bone broth or spread over bread, roasted vegetables, or meat dishes.

What pairs with bone marrow? ›

Roasted bone marrow served on toast is one of the classic gourmet dishes with origins extending at least as far back as France in the 1600s. The modern take on the dish often involves serving the roasted bones with toast, a small heap of grey sea salt, and an herb salad.

Why is bone marrow so flavorful? ›

What does bone marrow actually taste like? Many people say it has an umami flavor and tastes very buttery and creamy because of its high fat content. Cooked properly, it has a slightly sweet, savory full-bodied flavor.

What is the Flavour of marrow? ›

The marrow is actually a courgette that has been left on the plant to grow a little longer; likewise, if you pick a marrow when small, it's classed as a courgette. Marrow has a creamy flesh, edible skin and seeds, and a mild flavour.

Which bone marrow is best? ›

While you can get bone marrow from almost any animal, beef marrow is the most popular. Tell your butcher you're looking to cook with bone marrow and he or she should have some good recommendations. Otherwise, you can ask them for shank bones, neck bones, knucklebones, or oxtail.

What do you do with bone marrow compound butter? ›

It's easier than you think! Just combine softened butter with some live fire roasted bone marrow, roasted garlic, and a sprinkle of magic. This butter is so versatile, you can slather it on crusty bread, add it to soups or stews, or simply enjoy it on its own.

Can you eat raw bone marrow? ›

Raw Bone Marrow has become extremely popular amongst the Carnivore and Ancestral eating communities. Raw Bone Marrow is surprisingly palatable, clean tasting, easily digested and pairs well with a sprinkle of Kosher salt.

Can dogs eat bone marrow? ›

To sum it up, fatty foods like bone marrow should be consumed in moderation, especially for dogs with health concerns. Cooked bone marrow, in small amounts, can be served with a meal or as an occasional treat. However, dogs cannot eat cooked bones.

Is bone marrow an acquired taste? ›

Marrow, the gelatinous tissue running through the inside of bones, remains an acquired taste, but it's subtler in taste than most other offal, and local chefs are finding an increasingly receptive audience for it, particularly when dramatically presented inside cross-split bones that look like the highest form of ...

How long does it take to do a bone marrow? ›

You have a local anaesthetic injection to numb a small area on your hip. The doctor puts a needle into your hip to suck out some bone marrow. The test takes about 30 minutes. You should get your results within 1 or 2 weeks.

How long does it take for bone marrow to cook? ›

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Put bones, cut side up, on foil-lined baking sheet or in ovenproof skillet. Cook until marrow is soft and has begun to separate from the bone, about 15 minutes.

How long to smoke bones for bone broth? ›

Smoke the bones until the marrow has softened and started to separate from the bone, the top should be a nice golden colour. These were in the smoker for around 40 minutes – it's a very short cook.

How do you know when bone marrow is ready? ›

Simply cook the bones fat-side up in the hot oven for fifteen to thirty minutes, depending on the size of the bones, before sprinkling them with salt or serving them as-is with a side of salt. When cooked properly, bone marrow should have a semisolid, jelly-like texture.

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