

Robert's 'Feast of Thanks' – A Heartwarming Act of Kindness
Robert’s Smokin’ BBQ hands down offers some of the finest BBQ in Pasco county! Not only that, this small local business with a big heart, donated a ton of food to the Front Line workers at AdventHealth North Pinellas, for them, Thank you just doesn’t seem like enough.
Robert’s Smokin’ BBQ’s generosity appears to know no bounds, they also donated 500 Thanksgiving dinners to families throughout the county who were impacted by Hurricanes Helene and Milton. It came after the restaurant’s first location was destroyed by floodwaters during Hurricane Helene.
Robert’s ‘Feast of Thanks’ was a glowing success. With the help of a donation from Lantern Specialty Care, they offered meals to families of Gulf Trace, Hudson Academy Middle School, and Seven Springs Middle School. The meals included a smoked turkey, stuffing, green beans and holiday BBQ sauce.
Owner Robert Luke said he wants to reopen in a new location in Port Richey. He said, “I’ll tell you, that probably was the hardest three days after that for me, I was devastated mentally, psychologically, emotionally. I was destroyed,” said owner Robert Luke.
Luke opened his original location in 2016, but he said he’s been perfecting his barbecue recipe since 1972. “Since I was a little kid, following behind Mr. Pretty, my granddaddy. You know, trying to get in his way, never knowing that this would be my way,” said Luke.
He’s tried to foster that same close-knit environment in his restaurants. Luke works with a number of his actual family members, but he refers even to those not related to him as family. “I don’t have any employees,” he said. That extends to some customers, too.
“He treats everybody as though they are family, and how can you not support a local business that’s like that?” said Ryan Burke. “Plus, he makes the best barbecue I’ve ever had, so that makes it easy.” Burke is someone Luke calls a brother. They got to know each other after Luke catered events for him. Now, they’ve teamed up to get meals to those in need.
“This is the only holiday that is really centered around family,” said Luke. “I’m a family-style restaurant. Family first.” Burke said it was his 11-year-old daughter, Calleigh’s, idea: give people impacted by the storms a Thanksgiving dinner. He said his employer, Lantern Specialty Care, donated $50,000. Luke’s team is donated their time and skills to barbecue 500 turkeys. They were part of a full meal that was picked up or delivered in time for the big day.
The prepared meals went to families that may not have otherwise been able to have a normal Thanksgiving because they lost their appliances, they didn’t have a kitchen, they were living in a temporary space, an RV,” Burke said. They’re circumstances held a special place in Luke’s heart. “When you talk about devastation to a small business, this is devastation,” Luke can be heard saying on a video he took of the inside of his Port Richey location after floodwaters receded. “We lost every piece of equipment we had,” Luke told Spectrum News. “We had every reason to give up, too. It ain’t in me.”
Luke and his team kept going at their holiday location, Robert’s Smokin’ BBQ 2. That’s where they barbecued for this epic undertaking. “I think when you do anything, except you do it with your heart and you’re really doing it, then it’s not work. So, it becomes a very easy task,” said Luke. He said he wants to find a new location in Port Richey. For now, he’s focused on the task at hand: giving families who’ve lost so much a reason to give thanks.