Dcpcooks
Well-Known Member
Sounds awesome. I might have to make the pork broth and Tare sauce
It's worth the effort. Momofuko cook book from David Changs NY ramen shop has all the recipes of your looking for some ideas.
Sounds awesome. I might have to make the pork broth and Tare sauce
I never use a temp probe. I go by about what time I think it will be done based on experience, then start checking tenderness with a wooden skewer.
When finished, wrap in foil and place in a small cooler filled with rags or newspaper. It will hold temp for at least 6 hours, probably longer.Dropped a 6 lb brisket flat on today at 7:30 and it's heating up wayyyy fast .
Are temp probes really that effective in briskets? They seem so thin so part of me is wondering if it's not actually as warm as the thermo says
Hey, to each their own, my friend. My experience, and given I've only cooked maybe a dozen briskets tops over the past 3 years, is that the point tends to be tender more quickly than the flat. Pretty much every one I've done has been that way. That's not to say it came to temp more quickly than the flat, but it was done and tender at a lower temp and time than the flat.
That's one reason the point works so well for burnt ends. You pull the brisket off and both the point and the flat are done, and you cube the point, add more rub and add BBQ sauce, and put it back on the smoker for a few hours. All that fat keeps it tender and moist instead of it drying out (which can happen to a flat).
I also suggest NOT cooking to temp, but cooking to doneness. The "probe test", where you stick a probe into the meat and gauge whether the meat has tenderized or it's still tough, is my preferred method. I use my instant-read thermometer, more for shape/size than for temp reading. When the probe slides in with little resistance (once through the bark of course), it's done. I've actually had briskets where the point is done but the flat isn't that close, where I've cut the point off for burnt ends but left the flat on the smoker to finish.
had lamb once at a Moroccan or Indian place but I am pretty sure it was braised, tasted great.
the ones you made look fantastic. it's weird up here in ND the only lamb at the store comes in frozen, I may have to find someone who raises them and try to get it fresh.
I'm a huge fan of lamb, I've made smoked rack of lamb a couple times also, and it was phenomenal
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Ok... One more question about brisket. I promise (I think). Still a newb on this.
I put the brisket flat on this last saturday at ~7am. Injected with chicken broth prior to smoking and rubbed with salt and pepper/ Got it past 150 without crutching. Had the water, steamer thingy with HB hefe. Brisket was top rack in mt MES. at 185 I cranked the heat from 225 to 275 cuz I noticed that I didnt really have a bbark when I opened the MES. Pulled it at ~4pm and (it was at 275 for probably an hour) wrapped in foil, blanket, cooler. Served aout 3 hours later. The thing was delicious. I definitely will be doing it again. That being said, it was a little drier than Im used to with brisket. My friends didnt seem to think so but when I asked my wife, she knows I prefer honest criticism she said it was a touch dry, and I agree.
Any suggestions on what to do? Would brining help? It was so close to being absolutely awesome, but the slight dryness bummed me out a bit. Also didnt have a terrific smoke ring, but had smoke flavor, so Im not overly concerned about that.
1: You won't get a smoke ring from the MES.
2: Tough to say. Brisket is an art, and I find way too often that it's more dry than I prefer. Brining might help. Foiling or butcher paper might help (although with foil you get closer to that "pot roast" texture going). I like the moisture when foiling, but usually try to avoid it. And IMHO finding a thicker brisket helps too.
How did you measure doneness BTW? I find if it's just a bit underdone, often you end up with dry tough side. When overdone, it's dry and falling apart. Hitting that perfect middle where it's tender and moist is sometimes not easy...
I'm a huge fan of lamb, I've made smoked rack of lamb a couple times also, and it was phenomenal
I just got done eating a delicious pork chop rice/wild rice with green beans, yellow squash, and zucchini and picture is still making me hungry.
lamb is definitely in my future.
I wonder if it wasnt quite done kev. They can go to 200 or 205. The fat cap and its trim would have certainly mattered, Aaron Franklin speaks to that in that video. Also don't discount looking at the meat and finding a very good marbled piece, verse one that might have just been a little tougher and more lean. I cook everything at 275 and have never put anything in the pan. I tin foil it for easy clean up. I've seen people open them up and spray them every 30 minutes and such. I don't know if it helps, I just set it to 275 and pull it at the temp I want. I add Hickory and Cherry chips sometimes every 30min then 45 to 1hr , until done and if you do that then you will taste some smoke. I leave vent fully open and have since day one.
I have had two different expensive pellet grill meats that I don't think were as good. I can barely taste the smoke in most people's cooking. Made me wonder if I'm doing it wrong. So I tried using less smoke and it just didn't taste good to me. I think it's because it's just a super awesome system. The smoke comes from below the meat then right up through the vent. Wait till you see those two briskets from last night. I have a 14 pound pork shoulder waiting to go on, might just throw it on tonight. See with an electric smoker, looking at it through my back window, I can turn it on and use it whenever I want and I do.
@bwarbiany thanks for the cool threads. Had fun already peaking around.
Ok... One more question about brisket. I promise (I think). Still a newb on this.
I put the brisket flat on this last saturday at ~7am. Injected with chicken broth prior to smoking and rubbed with salt and pepper/ Got it past 150 without crutching. Had the water, steamer thingy with HB hefe. Brisket was top rack in mt MES. at 185 I cranked the heat from 225 to 275 cuz I noticed that I didnt really have a bbark when I opened the MES. Pulled it at ~4pm and (it was at 275 for probably an hour) wrapped in foil, blanket, cooler. Served aout 3 hours later. The thing was delicious. I definitely will be doing it again. That being said, it was a little drier than Im used to with brisket. My friends didnt seem to think so but when I asked my wife, she knows I prefer honest criticism she said it was a touch dry, and I agree.
Any suggestions on what to do? Would brining help? It was so close to being absolutely awesome, but the slight dryness bummed me out a bit. Also didnt have a terrific smoke ring, but had smoke flavor, so Im not overly concerned about that.
Pork Chops
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Did you add any liquid when you foiled? That might help, and you can use almost anything.
Couldn't figure out what to cook tonight. Decided to break out my new meat grinder and ground up some Chuck and bacon and made burgs. Smoked em with 35% hickory 60% cherry and a smidge of mesquite. Turned out so good