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Here’s My Homemade Pastrami Process
Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:05 pm
Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:05 pm
Since I had pictures of my homemade pastrami from the brisket challenge, I figured I’d post my process for any interested.
Brisket is the ultimate cut of meat for pastrami, but you can use a cut like eye of round, which is good if you have a slicer and can slice it. The process is the same, but depending on how big the meat is, you may need an extra day or two in the cure to make sure the interior gets cured.
Brisket soaking in cure.
Begin with a brisket, trim it like you would for smoking.
Then make a brine/cure with 1 gallon of water, 1 cup salt, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons Prague powder, 2 jars pickling spice. Mix well. You may need a second or third batch, depending on the size of your soaking container. You don’t need to add more picking spice to the second or third batch, unless you want.
Use an injector to inject the brisket with the cure. This will speed up the curing process and cut the number of days you need to soak.
Soak the brisket in a large container in the fridge for 4 days. Use a plate or something similar to help weigh down the brisket. More than likely, 2 days would be enough time, but I know 4 works (if you inject it first). You have to make sure the cure works it’s way into the center of the meat, which takes time.
A great picture of a cured brisket. A fresh brisket is on the top and the 4-day cured brisket is on the bottom. (The nitrite in the water causes met myoglobin which turns the meat brown.)
Remove the brisket from the brine, let it sit for half an hour or so to drain and rub with cracked black pepper. Smoke the brisket the same way you smoke any brisket. I like 250 degrees for 10-12 hours, generally - wrapping in butcher paper half way through.
The cooked pastrami.
Once the brisket is cooked, you can slice it and serve it warm, or (once cool) wrap in Saran Wrap and refrigerate for several days before slicing.
The sliced pastrami.
The pastrami turns pink because of the nitrite. The nitrite reacts to the heat in the cooking processes, causing a pink pigment.
How I sliced it.
This is the fresh brisket (not cured) from the picture above. You can see the color of the brisket is not pink because there was no nitrite.
Brisket is the ultimate cut of meat for pastrami, but you can use a cut like eye of round, which is good if you have a slicer and can slice it. The process is the same, but depending on how big the meat is, you may need an extra day or two in the cure to make sure the interior gets cured.
Brisket soaking in cure.
Begin with a brisket, trim it like you would for smoking.
Then make a brine/cure with 1 gallon of water, 1 cup salt, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons Prague powder, 2 jars pickling spice. Mix well. You may need a second or third batch, depending on the size of your soaking container. You don’t need to add more picking spice to the second or third batch, unless you want.
Use an injector to inject the brisket with the cure. This will speed up the curing process and cut the number of days you need to soak.
Soak the brisket in a large container in the fridge for 4 days. Use a plate or something similar to help weigh down the brisket. More than likely, 2 days would be enough time, but I know 4 works (if you inject it first). You have to make sure the cure works it’s way into the center of the meat, which takes time.
A great picture of a cured brisket. A fresh brisket is on the top and the 4-day cured brisket is on the bottom. (The nitrite in the water causes met myoglobin which turns the meat brown.)
Remove the brisket from the brine, let it sit for half an hour or so to drain and rub with cracked black pepper. Smoke the brisket the same way you smoke any brisket. I like 250 degrees for 10-12 hours, generally - wrapping in butcher paper half way through.
The cooked pastrami.
Once the brisket is cooked, you can slice it and serve it warm, or (once cool) wrap in Saran Wrap and refrigerate for several days before slicing.
The sliced pastrami.
The pastrami turns pink because of the nitrite. The nitrite reacts to the heat in the cooking processes, causing a pink pigment.
How I sliced it.
This is the fresh brisket (not cured) from the picture above. You can see the color of the brisket is not pink because there was no nitrite.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:20 pm to SixthAndBarone
mine from a few weeks ago


Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:22 pm to t00f
Nice! Feel free to tell us if you do anything different from what I wrote.
Mine was sliced cold after a few days so I don’t have that juicy-goodness in the photo.
Mine was sliced cold after a few days so I don’t have that juicy-goodness in the photo.
This post was edited on 8/3/22 at 1:23 pm
Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:33 pm to SixthAndBarone
I see you have quite a layer of fat there on the cured brisket. I don't eat pastrami much...so how is the taste / texture with that much fat on it, served cold or hot?
Thanks for sharing your process and recipe. Very interesting!
Thanks for sharing your process and recipe. Very interesting!
Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:39 pm to SUB
I trimmed the layer of fat before reheating to eat. That front part had a good layer because I left it trying to keep it the same diameter as the leaner side.
The fatty brisket part in the back with the intramuscular fat was literally like butter, it just melted when you hit into it…amazing.
I definitely serve hot. The New York traditional delis cook their pastrami and the steam it took warm it up before slicing. You can hear it any way you choose.
The fatty brisket part in the back with the intramuscular fat was literally like butter, it just melted when you hit into it…amazing.
I definitely serve hot. The New York traditional delis cook their pastrami and the steam it took warm it up before slicing. You can hear it any way you choose.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:50 pm to SixthAndBarone
I did not inject but as you said there is value if you want to shave the days. This was a small flat so just let it rest in the butcher paper for an hour. No tallow.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 1:53 pm to SixthAndBarone
I trim mine pretty thoroughly, and brine for at least a week. Here's my last one


Posted on 8/3/22 at 2:08 pm to SixthAndBarone
You are my hero. I'm sitting here with a broken neck, bed sore, Covid, and I want to run to Costco to get a brisket.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 2:45 pm to andouille
quote:
You are my hero. I'm sitting here with a broken neck, bed sore, Covid, and I want to run to Costco to get a brisket.
fack ... get well soon duille
Posted on 8/3/22 at 2:46 pm to SixthAndBarone
quote:
Then make a brine/cure with 1 gallon of water, 1 cup salt, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons Prague powder, 2 jars pickling spice
As a food safety expert and resident sausage inspector of the F&DB, it is pretty careless of you not to distinguish which Prague powder to use here. Do better.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:06 pm to HollywoodCourt
I figured #1 was common sense with pastrami, but since some may not know, you use Prague powder #1.
Please don’t sell me short, I’m knowledgeable in all meat processing, not just sausage.
Please don’t sell me short, I’m knowledgeable in all meat processing, not just sausage.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:11 pm to HollywoodCourt
quote:
Do better.
OP - You using a pellet smoker?
This post was edited on 8/3/22 at 3:12 pm
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:19 pm to SixthAndBarone
Looks damn good!
After new years/st pattys day they often mark down the packaged cured corn beef brisket points. I'll throw a few in the freezer and then soak in water overnight/smoke whenever I'm getting a pastrami craving.
After new years/st pattys day they often mark down the packaged cured corn beef brisket points. I'll throw a few in the freezer and then soak in water overnight/smoke whenever I'm getting a pastrami craving.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:27 pm to SUB
No, I have an offset smoker. Real wood burning. No digital temperature settings for me. That batch was post oak but I honestly love hickory the best.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:29 pm to SixthAndBarone
Your trim job looks like shite but since it's for pastrami, I'll give you a pass...
Good looking stuff 6th. The thing I'd have trouble with in making pastrami is committing to do that with a brisket instead of a traditional central Texas cook with it. And burnt ends...
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:30 pm to SixthAndBarone
I've done pastrami before but killed it with too much black pepper...may have to try it again. Love a good pastrami.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:31 pm to GeauxTigers0107
I was hesitant to post the raw photo because my briskets were shite to begin with (Winn Dixie on sale) and I knew someone would comment on it. I trimmed 3 that day and they were all hard to work with.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:32 pm to GeauxTigers0107
quote:
committing to do that with a brisket instead of a traditional central Texas cook
That’s why you do both at the same time. I cooked 3, 1 for me that day, 1 for a friend, and the pastrami was refrigerated for a week before eating.
Posted on 8/3/22 at 3:34 pm to ThreeBonesCater
quote:
I've done pastrami before but killed it with too much black pepper.
I actually used too much on this one. It had a kick and I needed to cut back the run a little. I think the key is to do a normal rub with pepper and don’t try to add extra thinking it needs more (which is why mine was spicy).
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