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How long are SRF briskets taking?

I know people have been saying they cook quickly.  I have an 18-20 lb gold brisket thawing.    I'm thinking of putting it on at 1am at 250-275. Hoping to pull it off at noon.  

Or are these things only taking 8 hours?   Set alarm and put on at 5am?

Thanks! 
Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
Grand Rapids MI

Best Answers

  • JRWhitee
    JRWhitee Posts: 5,678
    Answer ✓
    I just cooked an 18lb SRF, took 8.5 hrs
                                                                
    _________________________________________________
    Don't let the truth get in the way of a good story!
    Large BGE 2006, Mini Max 2014, 36" Blackstone, Anova Sous Vide
    Green Man Group 
    Johns Creek, Georgia
  • lousubcap
    lousubcap Posts: 36,671
    Answer ✓
    @JRWhitee - what calibrated (by any instrument) cook temp and SRF grade?    The key is the actual cook weight and thus where you might land.  
    My sole objective in any brisket cook is to finish inside the FTC window which I equate as easily 2-6 hours with a decent cooler.  Back that up and running around 260-280*F on the calibrated dome I plan on around 1 hour /lb and work from there.  You can dial it up if running long and also wrap in BP (to preserve the bark) or wrap in foil to power it home.  Many options to nail the finish-line time-wise. FWIW-
    Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood.  Life is too short for light/lite beer!  Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint.  

Answers

  • YukonRon
    YukonRon Posts: 17,261
    I did a 14# SRF black trimmed from 17 that finished in 9 1/2 hours. Then I did a 14.5 SRF Black that took 17 1/2 hours. I have cooked a lot of brisket, done the same way for years, and the only thing I know to tell people is what Frank told me years ago “toothpick for the win, the cow drives the cook.” That usually equates to several bottles of Red in the process. I had no clue when I started, have no clue now. Most every time I try the “time vs weight” calculation to hit the meal projected approximation, I fail.

    Good luck on a fun and frustrating cook.
    "Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber

    XL and MM
    Louisville, Kentucky
  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,396
    YukonRon said:
    I did a 14# SRF black trimmed from 17 that finished in 9 1/2 hours. Then I did a 14.5 SRF Black that took 17 1/2 hours. I have cooked a lot of brisket, done the same way for years, and the only thing I know to tell people is what Frank told me years ago “toothpick for the win, the cow drives the cook.” That usually equates to several bottles of Red in the process. I had no clue when I started, have no clue now. Most every time I try the “time vs weight” calculation to hit the meal projected approximation, I fail.

    Good luck on a fun and frustrating cook.
    Well, that is super encouraging @YukonRon !  I am assuming you are in the 250-275 degree dome temp camp?  I do recall some pork butts I attempted in my very early egging days.  Not ready in time for a birthday party we were hosting.  I ended up hustling over to our local Famous Dave's and buying a couple trays of pulled pork to serve. Epic Fail.  Not sure when I am going to start this thing yet!


    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI
  • JRWhitee
    JRWhitee Posts: 5,678
    lousubcap said:
    @JRWhitee - what calibrated (by any instrument) cook temp and SRF grade?    The key is the actual cook weight and thus where you might land.  
    My sole objective in any brisket cook is to finish inside the FTC window which I equate as easily 2-6 hours with a decent cooler.  Back that up and running around 260-280*F on the calibrated dome I plan on around 1 hour /lb and work from there.  You can dial it up if running long and also wrap in BP (to preserve the bark) or wrap in foil to power it home.  Many options to nail the finish-line time-wise. FWIW-
    This was a SRF Black 18.5 before trimming. Took about a little over a lb off. I am in Naples at my cousins, used his large egg with his redicheck thermometer. Egg was dialed in at 260, I stuck the thermopen in the dome opening to double check it read within a few degrees. We let it rest a couple hours in cooler, we were flexible with eating time. Worked out perfect, the crowd stated it was the best brisket they ever had. 
                                                                
    _________________________________________________
    Don't let the truth get in the way of a good story!
    Large BGE 2006, Mini Max 2014, 36" Blackstone, Anova Sous Vide
    Green Man Group 
    Johns Creek, Georgia
  • ColbyLang
    ColbyLang Posts: 4,385
    Watching this. 

    Have a 12.5 # black grade that I’m cooking for NYE. Gonna trim very little and go straight Dalmatian rub on it. Prime briskets cook quick, thinking this will run quick too
  • YukonRon
    YukonRon Posts: 17,261
    kl8ton said:
    YukonRon said:
    I did a 14# SRF black trimmed from 17 that finished in 9 1/2 hours. Then I did a 14.5 SRF Black that took 17 1/2 hours. I have cooked a lot of brisket, done the same way for years, and the only thing I know to tell people is what Frank told me years ago “toothpick for the win, the cow drives the cook.” That usually equates to several bottles of Red in the process. I had no clue when I started, have no clue now. Most every time I try the “time vs weight” calculation to hit the meal projected approximation, I fail.

    Good luck on a fun and frustrating cook.
    Well, that is super encouraging @YukonRon !  I am assuming you are in the 250-275 degree dome temp camp?  I do recall some pork butts I attempted in my very early egging days.  Not ready in time for a birthday party we were hosting.  I ended up hustling over to our local Famous Dave's and buying a couple trays of pulled pork to serve. Epic Fail.  Not sure when I am going to start this thing yet!


    I shoot for 225F° on my XL, it usually stays between 230°F and 250°F. Low, slow, and smoked all day with Pecan. Use Gun Powder for the Rub. Recommend it very highly.
    "Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber

    XL and MM
    Louisville, Kentucky
  • ColbyLang
    ColbyLang Posts: 4,385
    How’d it turn out????
  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,396
    I put it on at 11 pm. Egg temp alarm went off at 5am. Grate temp creeped up to 325. Brisket was at 160. Calibrated dome temp reading 290. I slightly closed bottom vent.  Now at 730am brisket temp is 180 (measuring thickest part of the flat). Bark looks really good.  No stall as of yet.  Hoping to keep it on a few more hours.  I'll start probing in a little while. Butcher paper and cooler on standby.  

    @ColbyLang
    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI
  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,396


    Called it. 

    9 hours 20 minutes
    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI
  • gmanrva
    gmanrva Posts: 429
    Looks fantastic, good eats ahead!!
    LGE Mechanicsville Va, XLGE Wake Va., LGE Duck NC.
    Formely Gman2 before password debacle 
  • lousubcap
    lousubcap Posts: 36,671
    That is a great bark right there. Standing by for your meat coma assessment of that bad boy.  Eating extremely well later today.  Enjoy!
    Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood.  Life is too short for light/lite beer!  Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint.  
  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,396
    @lousubcap

    It was fantastic sir!   
    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI