Saturday, 29 January 2011

Brisket #1 - Part Deux

Brisket is a piece of meat that needs long cooking in fairly low temperatures. It's mostly used in stews but is apparently perfect for smoking in your barbecue, low and slow stylee. To acheive that in my Weber OTP I've cut a piece of metal that covers most of the bottom of the kettle and is then folded 90 degrees to form a pocket for the charcoal. This creates a better airflow where all the air that enters from the bottom vents is directed up through the coals and into the kettle, while still giving ample space for the meat to be cooked
indirectly.
Minion method with Oak chunks.
In order to keep the heat for such a long time (5+ hours) without refilling, I use something called the Minion Method. Fill up with unlit charcoal and a few pieces of wood to create the smoke, light a third of a chimney and pour over the unlit coals which will then slowly ignite the rest of the coals, giving you a long nice burn.

After 2.5 hours.
Since this was my first attempt at brisket, I went for something called a "high heat brisket" which means that you run the brisket in the barbecue for 2.5 hours until the meat reach a temperature of about 75 degrees Celcius. You then wrap the whole brisket in tinfoil in order to keep the juices and put it back on the grill for another two hours, until the temperature inside the meat reaches 95 - 100 degrees. Off with the brisket and wrap it in a few towels and put in in a cooler, so that the meat can rest. A normal steak should always rest for about five minutes after cooking, so a large piece of meat like this should rest for about an hour, hence the towels and eski to keep the temperature.

Less smoke ring than expected.

Finally, unwrap the brisket, dodge the wife's angry looks because the meat sauces leaked out and stained the towels, cut it up and *tada*!

A lovely meal.
Or was it? It tasted rather good, but a cheap roast in the oven also tastes rather good and it doesn't take six hours to cook. The meat looked rather dark compared to pictures I've seen, and the smoke ring (the red ring around the edges caused by the smoke) was less then expected. So I will of course try it again, after I've done more research and asked around what can be improved. As someone wrote on a BBQ forum, it took him 50 briskets until the 51st tasted like Heaven. Mine's still in Bedford...

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