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Loving My New Large BGE! Brisket Question
Comments
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I'm from the low and slow school when I do Brisket I put it on @225 and don't bother it until it's done at internal temp of like 190 I also inject my Briskets with beef stock ,garlic powder Chile powder and worschister sauce and rub with Dizzy Pig rubs2 Large Eggs and a Mini 2 Pit Bulls and a Pork shoulder or butt nearby and 100% SICILIANLong Island N.Y.
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I also inject with beef stock and Head County Marinade. Salt, pepper, garlic. 250º runn until 175ºinternal temp, wrap in plain white butcher paper (lets steam out and keeps moister in. Foil steams and washes the bark off. IMHO). Remove at 198º and place in my Cambro (cooler will work). Hold it for at least 1 hour. I hold mine for up to 5 or 6 hours, and the briskets are still very hot.
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"Personally, I'd love to put it on at some point tonight (maybe around 9 or 10) and let it go until I wake in the morning and just see where I'm at - then deciding on foiling or not..."
That's what I would do, but I'd probably wait until about 11 PM to put it on, have the egg somewhere in the 220 - 230 range and then check it around 6 AM and adjust as needed. Just make sure that the holes in your charcoal grate are not clogged so that you can have good airflow all night and sleep well.
It is unlikely that you will need to foil unless you are serving it for brunch. In the AM you can crank it up as high as 290 or so as needed to power through to the finish line.
Good luck - and make sure to post some pics.
XXL BGE, Karebecue, Chargiller Akorn Kamado, Weber Smokey Mountain, Grand Turbo gasser, Weber Smoky Joe, and the wheelbarrow that my grandfather used to cook steaks from his cattle
San Antonio, TX
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Thanks for the responses! I injected with some beef stock, Worcestershire, soy sauce & rub last night and am letting it marinate overnight. Do you generally put yours on at night or do you start 'em early in the morning? I'm not really on a timeline, but would like to have it ready for dinner on Saturday evening.Cooking on a Large BGE since December 2013...Knoxville, TN
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+1Charlesmaneri said:I'm from the low and slow school when I do Brisket I put it on @225 and don't bother it until it's done at internal temp of like 190 I also inject my Briskets with beef stock ,garlic powder Chile powder and worschister sauce and rub with Dizzy Pig rubsPure Michigan
Large BGE, Medium BGE, Mini BGE, Weber Smokey Mountain, Weber Performer.
If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went. -
To date, I have done them at night but they typically are finished pretty early. Centex and others have advocated for just starting early in the morning but cooking at 275 or so and by all accounts he makes the 2nd best brisket in the world so I was thinking I'll do my next one that way.
XXL BGE, Karebecue, Chargiller Akorn Kamado, Weber Smokey Mountain, Grand Turbo gasser, Weber Smoky Joe, and the wheelbarrow that my grandfather used to cook steaks from his cattle
San Antonio, TX
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crags9 I usually do it as a over night cook most times the brisket takes like 17 hours but all Briskets are different so don't go by what I'm saying I have had some go 22 hrs and some go 13 hours the important thing is you don't cook for time you cook till interunal temp is 190 however long it takes and when it's done then you have to FTC for about a hour of 2 then your ready to serve it remember to slice against the grain2 Large Eggs and a Mini 2 Pit Bulls and a Pork shoulder or butt nearby and 100% SICILIANLong Island N.Y.
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Great stuff guys! I will try and remember to snap of few pics as I go along!Cooking on a Large BGE since December 2013...Knoxville, TN
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In my experience you don't remove the brisket until it is tender. I start checking at 190 and wait until a fork inserted into the brisket twists very easily. You could also use the probe of a thermometer and when it goes in like butter it is ready. I have had it ready anywhere between 195 and 205 degrees.
Don't just arbitrarily pull it at 190 degrees.
I find it takes around 1.5 hours per pound without the crutch. With the crutch it will take around an hour per pound but the bark won't be as good.
Large BGE
Barry, Lancaster, PA -
11 lbs...start really late or really early. Don't ask how I know.Green egg, dead animal and alcohol. The "Boro".. TN
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