DIY Smoked Neck Bones & Ham Hocks
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Leave the store-bought ones in the store and learn how to smoke neck bones and ham hocks yourself! These DIY smoked neck bones and smoked ham hocks are easy to make and they will add and incredible amount of flavor to your soups, stews and chilis!

What are Smoked Neck Bones?
At the heart of Southern home cooking, smoked neck bones and ham hocks are commonly enjoyed with things like beans, potatoes, rice, cabbage as well as in soups and stews where they’re slow-cooked until their smoky, fork-tender meat falls right off. You have probably bought smoked neck bones or smoked ham hocks before at the store to add flavor to your dishes, especially your soups and stews. For example, split pea soup. Can you imagine making it without a smoked ham hock? No way!
But have you ever had homemade smoked neck bones or ham hocks? Let’s just say you can figure on multiplying the flavor factor by about a hundred and that’ll land you somewhere in the ballpark. I made my homemade chili a couple of weeks ago and it’s always a hit. But this time I thought I’d thrown in a smoked neck bone and wow, it took that chili to a new level!
In the pictures below I’m using pork neck bones to demonstrate the process, but the method for making homemade smoked ham hocks is identical. Making these is simple and straightforward, it just involves a bit of a wait for the neck bones or ham hocks to marinate in the brine. Once the waiting game is up it’s time to smoke them, and that part is relatively quick.

How to Use Smoked Neck Bones
Anything that stands to benefit from some savory, umami-rich and smoky flavor will welcome the addition of a smoked neck bone. Here are just a few dishes you can add them to during the cooking process for a major flavor boost:
- Instant Pot Chili
- White Bean Chili
- Ham and Bean Soup
- Bean Goulash
- Black Eyed Pea Soup
- Black Eyed Pea Soup with Sausage and Kale
- Albondigas Soup
- Split Pea and Ham Soup

DIY Smoked Neck Bones and Smoked Ham Hocks
Let’s get started!
The method for making smoked neck bones and smoked ham hocks is identical. I’m using neck bones in the pictures for point of reference. You can get raw ham hocks and neck bones and ham hocks at your local butcher, just ask them to set some aside for you. There are also stores in the U.S. like Cash and Carry that come frozen and for a good price.

Prepare the brine:
Add all the brine ingredients to a large bowl and stir until the salt and sugar are dissolved.

Cure the Neck Bones:
Divide the neck bones or ham hocks between two gallon ziplock bags and pour in the brine.
You can also place the neck bones/ham hocks in a stainless steel or food-grade plastic bucket with a lid to brine in there. Make sure the meat is submerged in the brine.

Place the ziplock bags in some kind of a dish to catch any leakage. I’m using baking dishes.
Refrigerate for 7 days, turning the bags over to ensure even distribution of the brine.

After 7 days of brining, rinse the neck bones or ham hocks and place them on a wire rack, set it on a cookie sheet, and refrigerate uncovered for another 24 hours. This will enable to smoke to better adhere to the meat.

Smoke the Neck Bones:
Don’t have a smoker? See the recipe card below for instructions for oven smoking.
I’m using my Masterbuilt 30″ Digital Electric Smoker. I LOVE this smoker. It’s very easy to use and has been going strong for over 8 years. When you’re ready to smoke them, set your smoker to 200 degrees F. Place the neck bones or ham hocks on the smoking grates, making sure they’re not touching each other. Add a couple of handfuls of wood chips to the smoker throughout the smoking process.
Hickory wood chips and apple wood chips are both great choices for pork.

Smoke until the internal temperature reaches 150 degrees F. You’ll need an instant read thermometer.
Once done, wrap the smoked neck bones or ham hocks and freeze them for long-term storage or refrigerate them if you’re going to use them within a week.

For more homemade charcuterie recipes try my:
- Homemade Bacon
- Porchetta
- Gravlax
- Canadian Bacon
- Italian Sausage Recipe
- Mexican Chorizo
- German Bratwurst
- British Bangers
- Breakfast Sausage Recipe
- Pork Rillettes
- German Bratwurst
- Capicola
- Smoked Cheddar Sausages
Save This Recipe

DIY Smoked Neck Bones & Ham Hocks
Ingredients
- 5 pounds pork neck bones or ham hocks
- 8 cups water
- 3/4 cup kosher salt
- 3/4 cup packed brown sugar
- 2 teaspoons pink curing salt aka Prague Powder #1
- 2 bay leaves
- 1 teaspoon black peppercorns
Instructions
- Make the brine by placing all the ingredients, except for the neck bones, in a large bowl and stirring until the salt and sugar are dissolved.
- Place the neck bones in a stainless steel or food grade plastic bucket/container with a lid, or divide between 2 gallon ziplock bags, and pour the brine over the neck bones. Cover with lid or close the ziplock bags and place the latter in a large dish to catch any leakage. Make sure the neck bones are covered in the brine. Refrigerate for 7 days, flipping the ziplock bags over each day to ensure even distribution of the brine.
- After 7 days rinse off the neck bones and place them on a wire rack on a cookie sheet and refrigerate them uncovered for another 24 hours. This will help the smoke to better adhere to the neck bones.
- Set your smoker to 200 degrees F and place the neck bones or ham hocks on the smoking grates, making sure they're not touching each other. Smoke the neck bones until they've reached an internal temperature of 150 degrees F, adding a handful of wood chips a couple of different times throughout the process. Smoking time will vary depending on the size of the neck bones but you can figure on about 2 hours.Once done, wrap the neck bones and freeze them for long-term storage or refrigerate if you plan on using them within a week.
- IF YOU DON'T HAVE A SMOKER: You can create a makeshift smoker in your oven. Place some wood chips in the bottom of a roasting pan (or something like it) on the bottom shelf of the oven and add just enough water to to the pan to moisten the chips without immersing them in water. Cover the pan with aluminum foil creating a tent at the top where the smoke can come out and circulate around the meat. Then place the prepared hocks on the oven rack above it and then roast them at 200 degrees F until they reach that 145 degree F internal temperature.
Nutrition
Originally published on The Daring Gourmet June 7, 2017
worked great good flavor just butchered to pigs total 480 lbs on the rail. Have made canadain bacon buckboard and jowl bacon for years. also smoked salom summer sasuage brats flat hams and westphila ham. bin smoking about 34 years.
Is 2 weeks in the brine too long ? 😣
Hi Brandi, over-brining meat can give it a mushy texture but the biggest risk is that it will be too salty. I would rinse them off and then soak them for an hour in cold water to draw out some of the salt and then proceed with smoking.
I have dry cured hams in the winter and know that after the 55 days of curing and smoking (8 hours a day for 5 days), the ham does not require refrigeration Is this true of wet cured hocks and hams also? I see hocks and other cured meats in the stores that are not refrigerated but dont know if they are dry or wet cured.
Thanks for sharing the recipe, I found fresh hocks yesterday and purchased them as I had never seen fresh before.
Hi Kimberly, I used the recipe, bang on today with the smoker, I told you I’d give you feedback on this! Have tagged you on Insta, so start using it, ha! I hope you are well! stay safe!
Awesome, Simon! How did they turn out?
Perfect, I will now cryovac and put in the freezer for winter! I have a short video and the brine on Instagram and I tagged you as well. @shotgun_spices thanks for the recipe.
Excellent, thank you Simon!
Hi There I’m using Hocks so how long would you smoke it for and what temp? Thanks!
Hi Simon, the temp will be the same, 200 F. The time will depend on the size of the hocks but I would plan on about 2 hours. Use a digital thermometer to periodically check for doneness. The hocks will be done when the internal temp reads 150 F. Happy smoking!
Thanks for the quick reply and all the information, it so much appreciated, Im using a Traeger smoker, so can’t wait. Hello from Victoria, Australia, stay safe and well, if you like you can see the progress after the brining on my Instagram page @shotgun_spices. If you have a page please let me know so I can follow! Thanks again!
That sounds great, Simon, I’d love to hear how it goes. My Instagram page is @daringgourmet but I haven’t actually gotten around to using it yet, ha! Friendly greetings to Victoria!
So this looks like it for use in stew or something later, can you smoke feef neck and eat like any other protein meat
Can I use a Treager Pellet smoker for this?
You bet, Terence!
Hi Kimberly,
It has always been my understanding that 1 tsp. Prague Powder to 5# meat. I think your recipe has twice as much pink salt as necessary, which incidental can be toxic. Here is a great article that spells it all out: https:// www .thespruceeats.com/pink-salt-using-nitrates-to-cure-meat-1447029
Hi Robin, that guideline is for the dry curing method and you’re correct that it would be a much too high of level for that purpose. Wet curing (making a brine) is a different story and uses a higher ratio of Prague Powder.