I like the looks of that beer!
My wife really likes it, me too.
I really need more practice on the burgers, they came out fine but usually struggle moving them out of the fire on time.
I like the looks of that beer!
More attention needs to be directed at the burgers, less to the beer!My wife really likes it, me too.
I really need more practice on the burgers, they came out fine but usually struggle moving them out of the fire on time.
Finally got around to attempting a brisket today. Only the flat, from a cryovac purchase from BJs. Took the fat down to 1/4" (it was pretty much there to begin with), and used a 1/2 salt / 1/2 ground black pepper rub on it (via Franklin's down in Tejas). What amazed me the most was the "stall". It hung around 165* for about 3 hours, I eventually let the smoker go to 300* from the 220* I was holding it at. I wrapped it in parchment paper at 160*F (didn't have any butcher paper, thought I did, one of the kids used it for a "project" and never told me) at around 12:30 pm, then scrambled to get the temperature up later in the day. It only rested about 45 minutes, but was very tender and "passed" the pull test (hung without breaking, broke in the middle with slight pressure). All the kids liked it (except the neighbor girl, but that's her problem, we didn't know she was coming for dinner until about 2 pm). Hope to try a whole brisket next time, but I'll have to get up a bit earlier (was up at 4:45 am, but to take my daughter to work, not start the brisket) to ensure it's done for dinner.
Reserved about half of the brisket (before cooking this part) to make some pastrami. In the fridge at this point, turning it twice a day and once cured will smoke cook it to 165*, cool it and slice with a mandolin (aiming for a Monday project). The part I left for today was plenty for 6 people (4 of them "kids").
Edit: note that I did a "snake" of charcoal around the foil pan. It lasted about nine hours and was still warm enough to do a couple of hot dogs at the end. Very efficient way to do an all day cook in my opinion. (started at the pulled up corner of the foil pan, ended where you still see a few coals on the left, so about 3/4 or a snake)
View attachment 48894
View attachment 48895
Finally got around to attempting a brisket today. Only the flat, from a cryovac purchase from BJs. Took the fat down to 1/4" (it was pretty much there to begin with), and used a 1/2 salt / 1/2 ground black pepper rub on it (via Franklin's down in Tejas). What amazed me the most was the "stall". It hung around 165* for about 3 hours, I eventually let the smoker go to 300* from the 220* I was holding it at. I wrapped it in parchment paper at 160*F (didn't have any butcher paper, thought I did, one of the kids used it for a "project" and never told me) at around 12:30 pm, then scrambled to get the temperature up later in the day. It only rested about 45 minutes, but was very tender and "passed" the pull test (hung without breaking, broke in the middle with slight pressure). All the kids liked it (except the neighbor girl, but that's her problem, we didn't know she was coming for dinner until about 2 pm). Hope to try a whole brisket next time, but I'll have to get up a bit earlier (was up at 4:45 am, but to take my daughter to work, not start the brisket) to ensure it's done for dinner.
Reserved about half of the brisket (before cooking this part) to make some pastrami. In the fridge at this point, turning it twice a day and once cured will smoke cook it to 165*, cool it and slice with a mandolin (aiming for a Monday project). The part I left for today was plenty for 6 people (4 of them "kids").
Edit: note that I did a "snake" of charcoal around the foil pan. It lasted about nine hours and was still warm enough to do a couple of hot dogs at the end. Very efficient way to do an all day cook in my opinion. (started at the pulled up corner of the foil pan, ended where you still see a few coals on the left, so about 3/4 or a snake)
View attachment 48894
View attachment 48895
Water in the drip pan, no spritzing. There was a decent amount of moisture in the parchment paper. It was very tender and juicy, just not as tender and juicy as I though it should be, but then it was the flat and not the pointe, so less marbling in the meat. I also think I trimmed too much of the fat off, should have left it be as is since it looked pretty cleaned up out of the cryovac sack.Looks great for a first attempt! Did you spritz to keep it moist? Was there water in your drip pan? Brisket is without a doubt the hardest BBQ meat to master. If you can learn to nail it you will become a Jedi (Pit) Master!
I only nail 1 out of 3 I would say...... The other 2 (to me anyway) have faults. Too dry, too tough. But I keep on keeping on! I will try my next attempt on Monday!
I've been cooking for about 45 years or so (started grilling for my parents around age 10) and have no idea why I never attempted a brisket. My wife hypothesizes that neither of us were brought up in a house that smoked a brisket. We occasionally did corned beef, but that was the extent of it. I think I was always worried I'd mess it up and throw away a $20+ piece of meat. Well that worry is in the past, just need to keep looking for briskets on sale for my next attempt.@ceeaton Looks good! I have been saying I want to attempt brisket, but haven't yet, need more research.
Pulled pork in the works. Small part of the butt (only 3.75 lbs). Was 160*F at noon, only up to 165* at almost 4 pm, so opened the bottom vents wide open and hope I can "will" it to 190*F before dinner time. I knew a brisket had a stall, but a small pork butt piece?
View attachment 48973
Yup, usually hits a plateau somewhere between 140 and 150 as the collagen changes over to the lovely textured moistness that makes it so yummy and tender. It’s typically shorter in smaller pieces of meat......
Did finally get it to 190*F, but could only let it rest for 30 minutes. I don't have nice gloves to pull it with, so had to use two forks. Turned out really nice. I usually don't like to wrap it so the bark stays nice and crispy. Normally I do one of these and finish if off the next day in the crock pot. This is the first one I fully finished on the Weber kettle, it was very good!Plus you have the bone usually. Wrap it with in foil till ~200F
Did finally get it to 190*F, but could only let it rest for 30 minutes. I usually don't like to wrap it so the bark stays nice and crispy. Normally I do one of these and finish if off the next day in the crock pot. This is the first one I fully finished on the Weber kettle, it was very good!
Enter your email address to join: