Originally posted by Mosca
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This weekend’s brisket cook will be... problematic.
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Charter Member
- Oct 2014
- 7427
- NEPA
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Large Big Green Egg, Weber Performer Deluxe, Weber Smokey Joe Silver, Maverick 732, DigiQ, and too much other stuff to mention.
Originally posted by wu7y View Post
Man up Snow shoes. Think snow shoes. Oh yeah - and a big brush for the table and BGE.
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I must say, I admire you guys up North. Intestinal fortitude. Here in Houston, a few years ago, we had a little snow, maybe an inch or so at most. They shut down the whole city. STAY HOME! Do not venture out! Danger! Danger! No school either. Y’all would laugh yer ass off if you coulda been here.
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Couple of years ago my wife went to see her sister in Dallas to get away from winter, doesn't it snow a foot plus the night she got there. Like you say city shut down for days, power outages the whole bit.
I would have laughed but it -28 jillion up here....
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Looks like you have things well in hand. Just an idea for you... My front porch is painted and gets as slippery as a freshly surfaced ice rink in the winter. I fixed that by buying 10' of carpet runner from the local big box store. It goes out when the leaves turn color, and comes in when the trees bud. As I recall it wasn't more than a couple of dollars per foot
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Charter Member
- Oct 2014
- 7427
- NEPA
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Large Big Green Egg, Weber Performer Deluxe, Weber Smokey Joe Silver, Maverick 732, DigiQ, and too much other stuff to mention.
Well, I did everything I could to try to screw this up, and yet I have a brisket that wiggles like a jello mold. As good as I am at things like prime rib and steaks, I’m lost with brisket, because I just don’t do them that often, like once every couple three years. I don’t like overnight cooks, too much of a PITA.
Pics when it comes out of cambro.
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Charter Member
- Oct 2014
- 7427
- NEPA
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Large Big Green Egg, Weber Performer Deluxe, Weber Smokey Joe Silver, Maverick 732, DigiQ, and too much other stuff to mention.
I alway split the point ant the flat, but I didn’t do that this time. FOOD1 and FOOD2 are the point and flat, respectively. So I was reading the point for doneness. The flat, that read 191, was actually in the stall; I repositioned the probe and it was at 174! I reprogrammed the CyberQ to 275* and wrapped the butcher paper with foil, to tighten it up, removed the probe from the point so it wouldn’t distract me, and went back to bed.
At 9:30 I cambro’d it, flat at 202. Sliced it at 11:30, and delivered it to the destination!
Im not sure the photos do it justice. This was the moistest, most perfectly textured and flavored brisket I could have made.
The crumbles are true burnt ends. I cut 2†off the thin end, and the sides of the flat, the parts that had dried out a little, and chopped them and poured some of the melted fat on them.
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Charter Member
- Oct 2014
- 7427
- NEPA
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Large Big Green Egg, Weber Performer Deluxe, Weber Smokey Joe Silver, Maverick 732, DigiQ, and too much other stuff to mention.
Polarbear777 , STEbbq , @willxfmr
Here's why I love this forum! Believe me, I'm just another putz who eats a lot of mistakes, like everyone else.
So, imagine this: it's 3:30 AM. Your point is fast approaching 200. You have always separated your briskets. This time you didn't. You always inject briskets. This time you didn't. Your cook is going sideways, it's 10* outside and you woke up from a deep sleep and your mind is in a fog! This isn't what you thought would happen! What do you do!!???!!
You search the Pit master forum. And you find this:
https://pitmaster.amazingribs.com/fo...gher-than-flat
And the answer is: calm down. It's doing what it is supposed to do, you just don't recognize it.
That's when I reset the probe in the flat (actually I put the point probe in a different part of the flat and discovered the temp diff, and pulled the original flat probe). And I ignored the point. And everything did what it is supposed to do: it turned into brisket!
I like to reduce things that seem complicated. I always think, "It's a big piece of meat. Cook it." And that's true. But there's always something that sows doubt, and that is that there's an investment. We either spent a lot of money (prime rib, Wagyu steaks, lobster, bought a lot of special ingredients to use once, etc) or invested a lot of time (overnight or all day brisket, or an involved multiple day recipe process), or have an emotional investment in the outcome (big gathering, living up to a boast, etc).
The Pitmaster Forum hive mind solved my questions and led me to the answer. I did it with the help of my sisters and brothers here. If I take any credit, I'll take credit for knowing where to search for an answer, then following it. Thanks, friends.Last edited by Mosca; December 20, 2020, 12:20 PM.
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