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Beef Belly Burnt Ends
dbCooper
Posts: 2,678
This was my first time with a beef belly, the tried and true info in this post was used for guidance . . . https://eggheadforum.com/discussion/1212345/pork-belly-burnt-ends-malcom-reed-with-sea2skis-adaptation/p1 Thanks to @lousubcap and @Sea2Ski
Ingredients were modified as shown below . . .
Ingredients:
8lb Pork Belly skin removed 5lb Beef Belly skin removed
½ cup Killer Hogs The BBQ Rub ½ cup Spicy Dizzy Dust BBQ Rub
1 ½ sticks Butter sliced
½ cup Brown Sugar ½ cup Maple Syrup
¼ cup Honey
Pork Belly Burnt End Glaze:
1 cup Killer Hogs The BBQ Sauce 1 cup Blues Hog Competition BBQ Sauce
¼ cup Apple Juice ¼ cup Cherry Coke
¼ cup Apple Jelly ¼ cup Chokecherry Jam
1 Tablespoon Frank’s Hot Sauce 1 Tablespoon Contigo Hot Sauce
8lb Pork Belly skin removed 5lb Beef Belly skin removed
½ cup Killer Hogs The BBQ Rub ½ cup Spicy Dizzy Dust BBQ Rub
1 ½ sticks Butter sliced
½ cup Brown Sugar ½ cup Maple Syrup
¼ cup Honey
Pork Belly Burnt End Glaze:
1 cup Killer Hogs The BBQ Sauce 1 cup Blues Hog Competition BBQ Sauce
¼ cup Apple Juice ¼ cup Cherry Coke
¼ cup Apple Jelly ¼ cup Chokecherry Jam
1 Tablespoon Frank’s Hot Sauce 1 Tablespoon Contigo Hot Sauce
Cubed the belly into approx 1.5" squares and seasoned with the Dizzy Dust. On to the Egg for the smoking phase. Cherry wood chunks, temp 260ish . . .



Smoking done after about two hours, into the covered braising pan for about 2.5 hours . . .



Got the glaze ready while braising was going on . . .

Braising done, drained (and saved) the liquid, then glaze applied and back onto the Egg at about 325 for 20 min or so to firm up the glaze . . .. . .



All done . . .

LBGE, LBGE-PTR, 22" Weber, Coleman 413G
Great Plains, USA
Comments
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Great detailed post and they look fantastic. I can believe nothing came home!!Greensboro North Carolina
When in doubt Accelerate.... -
Looks fantastic, and I'm thinking they tasted fantastic.
Were they tender?Napoleon Prestige Pro 665, XL BGE, Lots of time for BBQ! -
Whoa!!!!!
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LBGE,SBGE, and a Mini makes three......Sweet home Alabama........ Stay thirsty my friends .
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Great thinking out-of-the-belly cook and pictorial. Some of us can use a tutorial on posting pics in the right sequence!
Also, how about a Beef vs. Pork head to head
Ribs -
Belly -
Chuck/Blade -
Tail -
Anus -
Liver -
Paws -
Heart -
Tongue -
canuckland -
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@Mark_B_Good - They were very tender, I think the extended braising phase is the key for beef and pork bellies. On a negative note, there was a internal horizontal membrane present in all the pieces. It did not render and was tough and inedible. Hoping others can shed light on if this is typical of all beef bellies.LBGE, LBGE-PTR, 22" Weber, Coleman 413GGreat Plains, USA
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Nice!-----------------------------------------------------------------------
| Cooking and blogging with a Large and Minimax in deepest, darkest England-shire
| My food blog ... BGE and other stuff ... http://www.thecooksdigest.com
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Given the proximity of ribs to belly, and taking a closer look at your first pic, perhaps there's a membrane similar to rib membrane?dbCooper said:@Mark_B_Good - They were very tender, I think the extended braising phase is the key for beef and pork bellies. On a negative note, there was a internal horizontal membrane present in all the pieces. It did not render and was tough and inedible. Hoping others can shed light on if this is typical of all beef bellies.canuckland -
Great documentation and cook right there. Appreciate your honest assessment regarding the comparison to pork belly burnt ends. Obvious why none made it home!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.
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They look fabulous!Craig aka Cmac Cooks
Amesbury, MA
#BGETeamGreen #TeamArteflame #TeamBarrelProof #TeamGozney
XL BGE, Mini-Max, La Caja China, Arteflame Classic 40, Arteflame One 20, Arteflame Euro 20, Cotton Gin Harvester, Weber Classic, Gozney Dome, Anova wifi Sous Vide. -
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Pretty sure I could clear my schedule, and eat all of that.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX.
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Way to shine!!! Just wondering here...after you egged them and not before could you have identified that membrane and cut it out? I know that would have doubled the number of pieces by making them thinner so probably have to shorten the brazing time, but so be it.Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time
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My two cents ( and I’ve never done beef belly, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express ) is it seems like an awful quick cook even with the braise to break down the connective tissue ( if any in there ) wondering if keeping whole vs cubing ( uncooked ) to extend then cube and braise … I know with my bacon burnt ends I sous vide for up to a day before smoking, I do cube before smoking but after the bath
my thought is the protein, when cubed , will become tender long before proper rendering… either way a solid cook and I will be ordering a belly to give it a goVisalia, Ca @lkapigian -
Those look fantastic!Large Egg with adjustable rig, Kick Ash Basket, Minimax and various Weber's.
Floyd Va -
@Canugghead @RRP @lkapigian - Thanks for commenting with your thoughts about the internal "membrane". Before the cook I did some searching on how to make burnt ends with this cut, did not find much info so I used the pork belly method for a guide. Although my results were good (ignoring the membrane) it's certainly possible the method used is wrong.Post cook I've tried to find info on beef belly composition, have not found anything about connective tissue or membranes. The highlighted parts in this pic best shows the nasties I had, it is after the braising step.
LBGE, LBGE-PTR, 22" Weber, Coleman 413GGreat Plains, USA -
IMO that is connective tissue ( broad term ), membrane lines body cavities ( think membrane on ribs ) I would think that is simply a time issue …dbCooper said:@Canugghead @RRP @lkapigian - Thanks for commenting with your thoughts about the internal "membrane". Before the cook I did some searching on how to make burnt ends with this cut, did not find much info so I used the pork belly method for a guide. Although my results were good (ignoring the membrane) it's certainly possible the method used is wrong.Post cook I've tried to find info on beef belly composition, have not found anything about connective tissue or membranes. The highlighted parts in this pic best shows the nasties I had, it is after the braising step.
Visalia, Ca @lkapigian -
^^^this. We also call it 'muscle' (in loose term). It's a delicacy, we trim it out and cook with liquid in IP or for hours in thermopot, like tendon.canuckland
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Yeah that's why I asked if they were tender ... because low and slow, and bringing to 200F would have likely tenderized all that, as it does with beef plate ribs.lkapigian said:
IMO that is connective tissue ( broad term ), membrane lines body cavities ( think membrane on ribs ) I would think that is simply a time issue …dbCooper said:@Canugghead @RRP @lkapigian - Thanks for commenting with your thoughts about the internal "membrane". Before the cook I did some searching on how to make burnt ends with this cut, did not find much info so I used the pork belly method for a guide. Although my results were good (ignoring the membrane) it's certainly possible the method used is wrong.Post cook I've tried to find info on beef belly composition, have not found anything about connective tissue or membranes. The highlighted parts in this pic best shows the nasties I had, it is after the braising step.
Napoleon Prestige Pro 665, XL BGE, Lots of time for BBQ! -
@Mark_B_Good I’m going to give it a go and try and stretch the time , or sous vide then smoke , will report backVisalia, Ca @lkapigian
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I see what you did there!lkapigian said:Gambrel Cord is delicious
Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time
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