If you were to rate all of the cool options for smoking food, propane smokers would be near the bottom. There are so many flashier alternatives to cook and infuse smoky flavor like a Big Green Egg, a Weber Summit or modified Weber kettle grill, an ace in the hole like the PK 360 Grill & Smoker, a barrel-shaped offset smoker, or even a backyard smokehouse. Hell, my buddy Tony once catered an event with a giant trailer-mounted rig that spat flames and fed dozens. Using a propane tank seems so effete in comparison. You don't use gas to fuel your smoker, goes the thinking, you use wood.
And yet! I'd heard good early reports about the Masterbuilt MPS 330G, a tall and boxy unit known as a cabinet smoker that offered a degree of control and an ease that makes most other methods look baroque.
How's that? Smoking food tends to require hands-on attention. (From here on out, I'll be talking about "hot smoking" where you both cook the food and smoke it, as opposed to "cold smoking" which applies smoke without heat.) Wood and charcoal fires need tending. The temperature in your smoker needs monitoring. You might need an independent thermometer to make sure it's cooking at the temperature you want. It can take hours. By nature, it is fussy and you need to be nearby in case things go sideways. It can be a great way to spend an afternoon sipping beers with your pals, but it is a commitment, and on the wrong day it can feel like a chore.
I loved the Masterbuilt because it's none of that. Instead, it embraces an idea that's deceptively simple and years old and something that much of the industry eschews: an effective thermostat to lock in the cooking temperature. Just set the big, plasticky dial at the Masterbuilt's base to the exact temperature you want to cook at.

