kendec65, Welcome to The Pit! Having Owned My Wife Eunice for Nearly 43 Years Now This Is The Perfect Time to Tell your Wife of Coarse You Could If You Only Had ???? For Equipment! Seriously If this will be your first attempt I might suggest Pork Butt for the First Attempt, it's a bit more forgiving Than Beef Brisket but not much! The Brisket should have the Fat Cap Trimmed off and the Point and the Flat Sepparated! You will need a good rub or A Dry Brine(Kosher Salt) for 20-48 hrs followed by a rub! Just before putting on your Smoker rub the Meat with Olive Oil! On the Smoker Dampered Down to about 225*-250* F, over a drip pan and with a water pan, Wood Chips or Chunks for the first 2-3 hrs! Check the Recipe and Technique Section On this Site! Also check out AdrenalineBBQ.Com. For The Same! They manufacture the S 'n S for the Weber Kettle Grills, their President David Parrish is the Pit Boss of The Amazing Ribs Pit Club!
One Definate Requirement for Smoking either Brisket or Butt is a good dual probe Digital Thermometer like the Maverick ET 732 or 733,
Good Smoking! Eat Well and Prosper! From Fargo ND, Dan
Last edited by Danjohnston949; February 4, 2016, 07:26 AM.
In Mid-South Carolina, from Columbia to Charleston on the coast, BBQ sauce is yellow. Here is a quick and easy South Carolina mustard BBQ sauce recipe.For those who are only familiar with traditional red BBQ sauces, yellow mustard sauce can be jarring at first -- at least until that first flavorful bite.
My toys:
Weber Summit Charcoal Grilling Center (WSCGC) aka Mr. Fancypants
Pit Barrel Cooker (which rocks), named Pretty Baby
Weber Summit S650 Gas Grill, named Hot 'n Fast (used mostly for searing and griddling)
Weber Kettle Premium 22" named Kettle Kid, eager to horn in with more cooks in the future
Camp Chef Somerset IV 4-burner outdoor gas range named AfterBurner due to its 30kBTU burners
Adrenaline BBQ Company Gear:
SnS Low Profile, DnG, and Large Charcoal Basket, for WSCGC
SnS Deluxe for 22" Kettle
Elevated SS Rack for WSCGC
SS Rack for DnG
Cast Iron Griddle
Grill Grate for SnS
Grill Grates: five 17.375 sections (retired to storage)
Grill Grates: six 19.25 panels for exact fit for Summit S650
gasser
Grill Grates for 22" Kettle
2 Grill Grate Griddles
Steelmade Griddle for Summit gas grill
Fireboard Gear:
Extreme BBQ Thermometer Package
Additional control unit
Additional probes: Competition Probes 1" (3) and 4" (1), 3 additional Ambient Probes. 1 additional Food Probe
2 Driver Cables
Pit Viper Fan (to pair with Fireboard Fan Driver Cable)
Pit Viper Fan new design (to pair with Fireboard Fan Driver Cable)
Thermoworks Gear:
Thermapen MK4 (pink)
Thermapen Classic (pink too)
Thermoworks MK4 orange
Temp Test 2 Smart Thermometer
Extra Big and Loud Timer
Timestick Trio
Maverick ET 73 a little workhorse with limited range
Maverick ET 733
Maverick (Ivation) ET 732
Grill Pinz
Vortex (two of them)
18" drip pan for WSCGC
Ceramic Spacers for WSCGC in Kamado Mode: 2 sets each 1/2", 1", 2". The 2" spacers work best with the 18" drip pan. The 1+1/2 inch spacers work best with the 14 inch cake pan.
Two Joule Sous Vide devices
3 Lipavi Sous Vide Tubs with Lids: 12, 18 and 26 quarts
Avid Armor Ultra Pro V32 Chamber Sealer
Instant Pot 6 Quart Electric Pressure Cooker
Instant Pot 10 Quart Electric Pressure Cooker
Charcoal Companion TurboQue
A-Maze-N tube 12 inch tube smoker accessory for use with pellets
BBQ Dragon and Dragon Chimney
Shun Classic Series:
8" Chef Knife
6" Chef's Knife
Gokujo Boning and Fillet Knife
3 1/2 inch Paring Knife
kendec65 Smoking a chuck roast is way easier than smoking a brisket. If you take it to 207-208 internal, it will pull like "buttah". You won't even need forks, it just pulls apart with your fingers. It's a smoky, juicy bit o' beef heaven.
Here is a topic started by David Parrish that discusses smoking a chuck roast. Although it starts with a post using the Pit Barrel Cooker, the info is good for any smoker:
Here's a pic of a 3.2lb "petite roast" I cooked in the EXACT style of a pork butt. Only change was I used Big Bad Beef Rub since it's beef. Otherwise
And welcome to the Pit!
Kathryn
Last edited by fzxdoc; February 4, 2016, 08:29 AM.
1. Trim all fat down to 1/8-1/4 on the back of the flat. Take as much as you can off the thickest part of the point (part of the point extends under the flat). I also trim out some of the fat between the two muscles if it is really thick.
2. Dry brine 24-48 hours.
3. Apply Big Bad Beef Rub while the pit is heating up.
4. Cook fat cap up until that dude is as dark as dark can get. Then flip to make sure the top of the flat is dark. If not, let it ride until it gets plenty dark, not just a browning of the surface, dark-black.
5. Wrap in foil or butcher paper when she is plenty dark all over. I'll put a little water in foil to prevent sticking.
6. Take to super probe tender in the thickest part of the flat, or 205 internal, whichever comes first.
7. Give it a good WARM rest for 2-3 hours.
8. Separate the muscles if you haven't already.
9. Slice each across the grain.
10. Combine lean and fatty pieces and chop up with a cleaver or big knife.
11. Quit calling it "pulled" and call it "chopped."
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