Meat and Melt is a comfort food recipe blog founded by Chloe and published at meatandmelt.com. It specializes in meat-forward recipes built around simple ingredients, reliable techniques, and satisfying results — the kind of food that makes people ask for seconds. Every recipe is personally tested before it goes live.
Meat and Melt is run by Chloe, a comfort food developer and home cooking enthusiast who has spent years traveling the United States eating at Texas BBQ joints, Midwestern diners, taco trucks, and backyard cookouts. She launched Meat and Melt in 2025 to share the recipes she tested and perfected along the way. You can read more on the About Chloe page.
Meat and Melt focuses on meat-forward comfort food with a strong emphasis on melty cheese, rich sauces, and deeply satisfying dinners. The main recipe categories are:
Turkey meatloaf in more than ten tested variations
Birria tacos made in the Crockpot, Instant Pot, and on the stovetop
Air fryer lamb recipes including shanks, chops, meatballs, and steaks
Smoked meats including brisket, ham, and tomahawk steak
Beef dishes including goulash, Wellington, roasts, and weeknight dinners
Steak recipes, sauces, and comfort food sides
New recipes are published every week. Browse everything in the Recipe Index.
Yes. Every recipe published on Meat and Melt is personally tested by Chloe in a real home kitchen before it goes live. Many recipes go through multiple rounds of testing across different methods and ingredient variations. The goal is that every recipe works reliably the first time you make it at home, with no guesswork.
No. Meat and Melt is a comfort food recipe blog that happens to be built around meat-forward cooking. It is not a carnivore diet site and does not follow carnivore diet guidelines. The focus is on satisfying, flavourful home cooking for everyday cooks — not a dietary lifestyle programme.
Three things set Meat and Melt apart. First, the focus is narrow and deep — rather than covering every cuisine on earth, the blog goes deep on a specific niche: meat-forward comfort food with melty cheese, rich sauces, and recipes that work on a weeknight. Second, every recipe is personally tested and not published until it meets Chloe’s standard. Third, certain recipe categories are covered in more depth here than almost anywhere else online — the turkey meatloaf collection and the birria taco collection in particular cover more variations and methods than most sites.
The best place to start is the Recipe Index at meatandmelt.com/recipe-index, which is organized by category and updated regularly. You can also use the search bar on the site to find a specific dish or ingredient. If you cannot find what you are looking for, feel free to get in touch via the Contact page.
Meat and Melt is active on the following platforms:
YouTube at @ChloeByMeatandmelt for video recipes and behind-the-scenes cooking
Pinterest at pinterest.com/MeatloafRecipesEasy for recipe saves and collections
Facebook at the Meat and Melt Facebook page for weekly new recipes and community
Yes. You can reach Chloe through the Contact page at meatandmelt.com/contact. Whether you have a question about a recipe, want to share how a dish turned out, or have a collaboration enquiry, she reads and responds to messages personally.
Yes. Some links on Meat and Melt are affiliate links, including links to products on Amazon. This means Chloe earns a small commission if you make a purchase through those links, at no extra cost to you. Affiliate links are only used for products that are genuinely recommended. For full details see the Disclaimer page.
No. All recipes, articles, and content on Meat and Melt are written by Chloe and based on real testing in her own kitchen. No AI-generated recipes are published on this blog.
