I've been reading on this board about chuck roasts with some interest, never having done one on the smoker. I confess to being a little mystified. You guys are talking about taking the meat above 200. Isn't a nice medium rare what we're going for on beef?
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Club Member
- Sep 2015
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You could sous vide at 131.5 for 48 hours and chill. Then cook indirectly to 115 internal and finally sear like a steak.
Other than that, 207 internal with a 2 hour hold in a 170 degree oven. Pull and thoroughly enjoy.
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tbob4 I've yet to get to it since I am the only Medium-rare eater in the house. Potkettleblack recommended it.
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Potkettleblack was right on. A chuck prepared like that is a "poor man's ribeye"! Awesome!
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I just did a full packer brisket by the same method, roughly and am very pleased with results, though I took it on the grill until it built acceptable bark. Nice hybrid.
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I like to call Chuck Roast Poor Man's Brisket. And we like to slice it like Brisket. But with Chuck Roast you also have the option of successfully pulling it. But you really do need to take it above 200 f. I typically shoot for IT of about 207 f. Approach your cook like you would Brisket. But keep in mind Chuck Roast is much more forgiving. And MUCH less expensive. So have fun with it!
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I have not seen a price spike in our area. (We don't have a Costco) But even if the price per pound is higher, the Chuck Roast is a much smaller piece of meat with less waste. Making it a very practical and cost effective selection.
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Costco prime packers are about half the price of bravery store chucks for me. Chuck + SV is poor man's ribeye. Chuck is easy brisket.
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i like Chuck roast as much if not better than brisket and I slice it like brisket. I start checking it at 200* by probing it with my thermo pen, it should feel like going butter, then wrap and cambro for min 2 hours. Like PJBowmaster it usually feels right near 105+. I also frequently cube and sauce it after tender back on the smoke for delicious chuckies burnt ends.
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smontle
here is fzxdoc log on chuckie's
Beef Chuck Roast:- 2.5 lb: ave PBC temp not recorded; 4 hours to 170 degF; wrapped and put back in cooker 3 hours more to reach 207 deg F internal. Rested in cambro 1 hour before slicing/chopping. Total cook time: 7 hours.
- 2.75 lb; 290 ave PBC temp; 2 hours to 160 degF; wrapped and put back on cooker 1.75 hour to reach 209.Total cook time: 3.75 hours.
- 2.75 lb; 275 ave PBC temp; 1.75 hours to stall at 155 deg f; left in stall for 2 hours before wrapping at 165 degF; wrapped and back in PBC at about 260 deg F ave PBC temp; took 40 minutes to get to 202 deg F but meat was not tender; went into a second stall for 2hours 50 minutes before reaching 208 deg F (3.5 hours after wrapping). Rested in 150 deg warming oven for 2 hours. Meat was pull-apart tender. Total Cook Time: 7.25 hours not including rest. Total rest time: 2 hours.
- 4 lb; 285 ave PBC temp; 3 hours to 160 degF; wrapped and put back on cooker 1 hour to reach 205. Rested 1 hour in cooler. Total cook time (not including resting): 4 hours.
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This one is a bit of a different approach - it's kind of multi-step but is about 8 hours from starting to cook to eating. http://dizzypigbbq.com/recipe/clays-pulled-beef/
I've used it at least 3-4 times and it's always awesome! Clay has finesse.
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Originally posted by JCGrill View PostI've been reading on this board about chuck roasts with some interest, never having done one on the smoker. I confess to being a little mystified.
When you all are talking about slow-cooking chuck roasts, and timing and results, which part of the chuck are you talking about?
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Originally posted by RobertC View Post
When you all are talking about slow-cooking chuck roasts, and timing and results, which part of the chuck are you talking about?
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I'm reviving this thread because next weekend I'm going to do a 3.5 pound boneless chuck. I'm considering doing the entire thing as burnt ends. Planning smoke, wrap, more cooking, then cambro. Do I have to be careful about getting the chuck too tender where it falls apart when I'm trying to cube it?
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Agree with HorseDoctor (I'm not surprised). More surface area = more bark. Bonus: thinner meat = faster cook.
This has given me the idea to do a 2.5 lb chuckie, 24 hours sous vide at 131, shock, chill, rub, smoke 2-3 hours for bark, cube, sauce, profit.
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Potkettleblack, suggestions on the smoking temp for that plan?
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Low. 225-250... I can hold a pretty steady 225 so that's about what I do with my gasser. If it's windy, I go a bit hotter, as there's a lot of variance.
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