Father’s Day
Recipes that make Dad smile
6 Recipes
Jake is not what you’d call a traditional father in the sense that he’s away a lot for work—weeks at a time sometimes when the pipeline job takes him to another state. So Father’s Day in our house is partly about making his favorite foods and partly about the kids actually getting uninterrupted time with him, which is honestly rarer than it should be.
He’s obsessed with smoking meats. Not in a casual way—in a way where he’s out at 5 a.m. checking temperatures and fussing with the smoker like it’s a temperamental newborn. The brisket is his masterpiece, and he’s weirdly secretive about the rub and the temperature curve, like he’s guarding nuclear codes instead of a barbecue recipe. But I’ve watched him make it a hundred times, and honestly, the magic is just patience and really good quality meat. He lets the kids help sometimes, and they take it deadly serious because their dad is teaching them something important.
The funny thing is that Jake is a big, tough guy—six-foot-two, works in construction, comes home covered in dirt and sweat—but he’ll spend an afternoon teaching Mason how to light the smoker or explaining to Clara why you can’t rush the temperature rise. He gets this soft look on his face when he’s teaching them something, and it reminds me that dads are doing their best too, especially when their work takes them away so much that every day at home feels precious. Father’s Day is when we all slow down and let him know that we notice.
The Menu
More Ideas for Dad
Old-Fashioned Smash Burgers
Crispy edges, melted cheese, and the kind of burger that makes everyone forget about the smoker.
Creamy Tuscan Chicken Skillet
Rich, creamy, and ready in thirty minutes. Jake asks for this every week.
Honey Garlic Salmon
Sweet, savory, and ready in twenty minutes.
Old-Fashioned Beef Brisket
Low and slow in the oven. Same tender brisket, no smoker needed.
Sheet Pan Honey Garlic Chicken & Vegetables
One pan, big flavors, minimal cleanup.
Nana Ruth’s Air Fryer Chicken Thighs
Crispy skin, juicy meat, and ready faster than firing up the grill.
Maggie’s Father’s Day Kitchen Tip
If you’re new to smoking meat, don’t panic about the temperature being exactly perfect. A good meat thermometer is your friend, and as long as you’re in the ballpark of the right temperature range, you’ll get delicious results. Low and slow is the motto—the longer it takes, the more forgiving it is. Jake says the secret isn’t fancy equipment; it’s patience and butter. Lots of butter.
I hope these recipes bring as much joy to your Father’s Day table as they bring to ours. Cooking for people you love is the best kind of magic.
— Maggie