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Smoking a Brisket - Tips/Tricks: UPDATED w pics on page 2
Posted on 2/12/25 at 5:38 pm
Posted on 2/12/25 at 5:38 pm
I’m smoking my first brisket (Costco) on my PitBoss pellet grill. Planning to follow this method.
Any tips or things to look out for?
How much time does it take to trim up typically?
Just salt, pepper, garlic?
Go to binder?
Meat Church - Brisket on Pellet Grill
Any tips or things to look out for?
How much time does it take to trim up typically?
Just salt, pepper, garlic?
Go to binder?
Meat Church - Brisket on Pellet Grill
quote:
1. Trim & Season:
• Remove excess fat, leave ~¼ inch on the bottom.
• Apply binder, then generously season.
• Let sit for 30 min (or overnight in the fridge).
2. Smoke at 200°F:
• Place brisket fat-side up.
• Smoke until internal temp hits 165°F.
3. Increase to 225°F:
• Continue smoking until 175°F.
4. Wrap in Butcher Paper:
• Wrap tightly and return to grill fat-side up.
5. Final Cook at 250°F:
• Cook until probe-tender (~203°F).
6. Rest:
• Let sit for 1 hour (or in a cooler up to 8 hours).
This post was edited on 2/16/25 at 11:51 am
Posted on 2/12/25 at 6:15 pm to Lazy But Talented
quote:
Smoke until internal temp hits 165°F. 3. Increase to 225°F: • Continue smoking until 175°F. 4. Wrap in Butcher Paper:
I don’t wrap until I have a nice bark but everything else looks good. I’ve done fat side up and down and both have came out great.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 6:54 pm to Lazy But Talented
Just cook it the way you wrote it. It all sounds good to me. Like crawfish, People overthink brisket way too much.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 7:06 pm to SixthAndBarone
Exactly. I’ve seen it wrapped at 165 and I’ve seen it left alone till 200. Smoked at 200 and at 275. They all turned out good
Do what you want.
Do what you want.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 7:12 pm to Lazy But Talented
This has been my go to method. His philosophy that set temp at 225 and it can't over cook is spot on.
And as others have mentioned. Pay attention at the stall and don't wrap until you get the bark you want.
FYI
If you are new to this, a cheap brisket is okay but once you've done a couple, pony up and get a prime and it is ....................... fantastic
Edited to add
Do not be impatient when you pull it to "rest". Let that chunk of beef goodness rest, and rest, and rest.
And as others have mentioned. Pay attention at the stall and don't wrap until you get the bark you want.
FYI
If you are new to this, a cheap brisket is okay but once you've done a couple, pony up and get a prime and it is ....................... fantastic
Edited to add
Do not be impatient when you pull it to "rest". Let that chunk of beef goodness rest, and rest, and rest.
This post was edited on 2/12/25 at 7:17 pm
Posted on 2/12/25 at 7:26 pm to Lazy But Talented
Patience. Ignore everything you’ve read/heard about time, it’s all about internal temp and feel (both how the brisket feels in your hands when you pick the whole thing up, and how it feels to a probe). In my experiences, i start checking at 195, but most will need to go to 200-205.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 8:00 pm to Lazy But Talented
Folks have been fighting over fat cap up or fat cap down for as long as there’s been fire and meat. It depends on what I’m cooking on. I use the fat cap to protect the meat from the higher heat source. On a Pit Boss, the fire pot is dead center under the grates and it’s going to be the hot spot on your grill. Especially if you’re cooking on the bottom rack, I’d probably do fat cap down. Spray or mop your brisket occasionally, if you’re worried about it drying out. Opinions will vary.
This post was edited on 2/12/25 at 8:02 pm
Posted on 2/12/25 at 8:13 pm to Bayou Tiger Fan Too
I’m not sure if it’ll fit on my top rack.
I do have the flame tamer add-on that sits above the fire pot to help distribute the heat a little better.
I do have the flame tamer add-on that sits above the fire pot to help distribute the heat a little better.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 8:42 pm to Lazy But Talented
The important thing about hot spots and where the heat is the most intense in your smoker is to put the flat away from that area and the point goes towards it. The point has more fat and won’t dry out like the flat might.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 9:02 pm to Lazy But Talented
Everything you listed I do except I wrap at between 165°-170°. Know your heat points and understand the stall. Plan accordingly based on size of brisket.
One thing I’ve learned is don’t compare it to what you see on social media. I did that for my first and it didn’t look like the pretty brisket with dark bark, even though it tasted awesome. Good luck. Keep us posted baw.
One thing I’ve learned is don’t compare it to what you see on social media. I did that for my first and it didn’t look like the pretty brisket with dark bark, even though it tasted awesome. Good luck. Keep us posted baw.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 9:05 pm to duckblind56
quote:
Edited to add Do not be impatient when you pull it to "rest". Let that chunk of beef goodness rest, and rest, and rest.
This. Everything you had already said (OP) is fine. But give yourself 4 hours rest in an ice chest. It’s almost important as the cooking part.
Posted on 2/12/25 at 9:21 pm to RonFNSwanson
quote:
But give yourself 4 hours rest in an ice chest. It’s almost important as the cooking part.
How so?
Posted on 2/12/25 at 10:07 pm to Lazy But Talented
quote:
Apply binder, then generously season.
Put some warm water in a spray bottle and spray your brisket in lieu of binder. Been doing this the last few smokes. Learned trick watching Goldee’s YT videos.
Don’t necessarily cook to temp. Every brisket is different. You want it at 203 at least. Take a intrant read thermometer and if it feels like your sticking butter it’s done.
I also put a small foil pan of water near the firebox. It helps keep the smoke chamber more humid which will help keep temperatures more consistent in the smoke chamber and keep your meat more moist on surface.
The longer the rest the better. I have a bbq blanket I put mine in minimal 4 hrs. You can wrap in foil then an old towel then put in a cooler.
The more corse the pepper the better. It helps with bark. I use mesh #16 black pepper. Don’t get fancy with seasoning salt, pepper and garlic powder is all you need.
This post was edited on 2/13/25 at 8:58 am
Posted on 2/12/25 at 10:10 pm to SixthAndBarone
quote:
How so?
You’re dealing with a huge piece of meat that takes longer to draw the juices back in from the outer part of the meat. Resting will make it more juicy and flavorful.
This post was edited on 2/12/25 at 10:11 pm
Posted on 2/13/25 at 5:53 am to Lazy But Talented
quote:
Smoke at 200°F:
• Place brisket fat-side up.
• Smoke until internal temp hits 165°F.
Unless you're trying to smoke it overnight, there's no reason to start the cook with the temp that low. Absolute lowest would be 225 and I would only do that for the first 2-3 hours then ramp up to 250.
You being a first-timer, it's fine to wrap at 175 internal but the more experience you get the more you will learn how to wrap when you have a good bark built. And then you'll learn that wrapping isn't even necessary.
Time to trim is directly related to your knife and knife skills. Watch Chud's brisket trim video on Chud's BBQ on YouTube for a proper trim.
Binder - anything wet. Water, ACV, mustard, hot sauce, WashYourSister, etc.
Rub - go to Academy and get a bottle of Killer Hogs TX Brisket Rub
Posted on 2/13/25 at 6:25 am to lsufan1971
I understand resting but where does the 4 hours come from?
Posted on 2/13/25 at 7:18 am to lsufan1971
quote:
Put some warm water in a spray bottle and pray your brisket online of binder.
What?
Posted on 2/13/25 at 2:09 pm to Lazy But Talented
You left out the most important part of the recipe.
Buy a good prime brisket, not some cheap choice or select crap brisket. Makes a huge difference.
Buy a good prime brisket, not some cheap choice or select crap brisket. Makes a huge difference.
Posted on 2/13/25 at 3:41 pm to TeddyPadillac
I mentioned I was getting it from Costco. Pretty sure they only have Prime.
Picked it up today.
Picked it up today.
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