Ok, so this one didn't go as well, if the blog name gives you any
indication. A few weeks ago, I purchased an Angus brisket -- about $4/lb
at Sam's Club. It was small, about 4.5lbs, so I assume it was actually a
half brisket. Not sure if it was the point or the flat, but I think,
given the fat cap, it was the point.
It was frozen
from Sam's, so I threw it in the freezer at home. Apparently I should
buy fresh and use immediately. I prepped in the usual way I've prepped
anything else -- thawed completely, coated in yellow mustard and applied
the McCormick Grill Mates "Cowboy Rub" as I wanted something with a
little kick and there's not much to choose from here in the Mid-Atlantic
this time of year. I need to start doing more mail order rubs. I'd also
nearly run out of my Kansas City rubs that I picked up out there before
Christmas.
So I prep and inject with low-sodium beef
broth (not sure if that was worth it or not, but I read it somewhere
and it seemed like a good idea). I also read that you could spice up the
broth by grinding some rub in a coffee grinder until it's powdery and
mixing it with the broth before you inject. I found that to mess up not
only my wife's coffee grinder (thank goodness she's lazy and only uses
the Keurig now) and it clogged my injector. I don't think it was worth
the effort. It sat in the fridge overnight.
Early Sunday morning, threw it on the smoker using mostly hickory
to start with some oak later in the day as the lump charcoal ran out
and I still needed some heat. Checked it hourly and applied a spray of
half apple juice and half apple-cider vinegar. And I waited. And I
waited. And I waited. Now theoretically, I should've reached a good temp
at around the 7 hour mark. I pulled the brisket around hour 5,
double-wrapped in foil to keep it moist, and put it back in the smoker.
And I waited. And I waited. And I waited.
For the life of me, I couldn't get the thermometer to budge off
120 degrees. I tried heating up the smoker to around 300 or so, and
waited. I moved the brisket over to the fire and unwrapped, and
waited....
Finally we had to get going to party, so I wrapped it in foil and
threw into the cooler (thank goodness for a cheap pork butt which was
delicious) and off we went. When we arrived, I threw brisket in oven for
another hour at about 400. Thermometer is now reading about 135 --
still well short of 190. I had to punt as it was nearly halftime and my
brisket still wasn't on the table. As I sliced, I could see that it was
fully cooked, but as I tasted, I knew I'd screwed up someplace. It
wasn't quite shoe leather, but it wasn't nearly as moist and tender as
I'd wanted. The flavor was outstanding, but the overdoneness killed it.
Thinking it's time for a new thermometer.
Sounds like your thermometer is kaput. A 4.5lb brisket is for sure only 50% of one, and if its the point you would want to use that more for corned beef then for smoking for a party due to the big band of fat that runs through the middle. For a small home brisket the flat works better. Checking it hourly will only slow down the cooking process. I cook mine at home on a Big Green Egg over night, and I never open to check on it. Turns out tender and melt in your mouth every time.
ReplyDeleteBrisket is an art form, one that takes practice. The true judge of any pit master. Keep trying, be patient! You will get it :)
@Imakebacon
Thanks for the encouraging words, bacon. I'm going to try again. But it's not a cheap experiment ;) I bought my first brisket before doing much homework on the cut. Now that I know better, I'm hoping to be a more-informed shopper. As well as getting a new thermometer.
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