Why would I ever have thought that smoking a brisket on a stick burner on the hottest day of the year was a good idea? Man it’s hot.
Why would I ever have thought that smoking a brisket on a stick burner on the hottest day of the year was a good idea? Man it’s hot.
Doggy how did your brisket turn out?
A. What brand of stick burner (Its a horizontal offset I assume) are you using?
B. What fuel are you using (Charcoal base and adding logs)
C. Fat side up or down? (The answer is always up on a stick burner and brisket.)
I used to run a Old Country Brazos and sold it about 6 years ago as it was just not worth the effort since there were a thousand places around me in Texas to buy brisket and everyone I knew was cooking their own. (Now I live a 1500 miles from good BBQ and I am going to get a new one in the spring.) I will have to order my firewood online, but I am going to bite the bullet. I am a brisket hound and just think its worth the effort on an offset for my situation. Everything else is just as good to me on a pellet grill.
Here was how I always made a pretty good brisket on a hot day.
1. Smoker in the shade. No direct sunlight.
2. Properly trim the brisket. 1/4" fat cap 10-11 lbs max on a packer after trimming. No piece of the brisket should be less than 1-1/4" thick.
3. Charcoal base in the firebox (Two chimney's) to bring up to temp and then add logs 2 to start then 1 every 45-60 minutes. (Pecan preferred species)
4. Cooked at 250 target smoker temp. Relied on the factory thermometer on the Brazos.
5. Control temp with stack full open always, use fire box damper to raise/lower temp. (takes about 10 minutes.)
6. Fatcap up and point toward the firebox, flat toward the stack. Spritz 1-2 times with apple cider vinegar and water mix (50/50) once or twice if needed.
7. Wrap in unwaxed butcher paper at 160-165. (5-6 hours in usually)
8. Pull at 200 (probe more important than temp) and let rest in butcher paper no towel for 1-2 hours.
9. Wrap in towel and put in a cheap cooler (Not a yeti, it will steam in there) for 2 up to 10 hours until time to serve. (You can put it in the oven if more than 8-10 hours is needed, just keep it wrapped in the butcher paper)
Fire management is the name of the game. Pellet smokers are going to use a lower temp of 225 to get more smoke flavor in the meat and take a lot longer. If you have a small offset, you want to go at a lower temp as well because your brisket is going to get closer to the fire and not cook evenly. The biggest mistake I made in the beginning was trying to predetermine a time to cook. Its a moving target sometimes. Same size brisket on the same smoker with the same wood on a similar temp day may take 11 hours this weekend and 13 next weekend.
The key is to decide when you want to eat and then back up your time from there so you are not rushing. Let the rest time in the cooler be your buffer. I always prefer getting an early afternoon start on a brisket and staying up late... So when I am good and drunk the brisket is already wrapped. If I can get the sucker in the cooler by 3 AM it will be ready for an afternoon BBQ.
A. What brand of stick burner (Its a horizontal offset I assume) are you using?
B. What fuel are you using (Charcoal base and adding logs)
C. Fat side up or down? (The answer is always up on a stick burner and brisket.)
I used to run a Old Country Brazos and sold it about 6 years ago as it was just not worth the effort since there were a thousand places around me in Texas to buy brisket and everyone I knew was cooking their own. (Now I live a 1500 miles from good BBQ and I am going to get a new one in the spring.) I will have to order my firewood online, but I am going to bite the bullet. I am a brisket hound and just think its worth the effort on an offset for my situation. Everything else is just as good to me on a pellet grill.
Here was how I always made a pretty good brisket on a hot day.
1. Smoker in the shade. No direct sunlight.
2. Properly trim the brisket. 1/4" fat cap 10-11 lbs max on a packer after trimming. No piece of the brisket should be less than 1-1/4" thick.
3. Charcoal base in the firebox (Two chimney's) to bring up to temp and then add logs 2 to start then 1 every 45-60 minutes. (Pecan preferred species)
4. Cooked at 250 target smoker temp. Relied on the factory thermometer on the Brazos.
5. Control temp with stack full open always, use fire box damper to raise/lower temp. (takes about 10 minutes.)
6. Fatcap up and point toward the firebox, flat toward the stack. Spritz 1-2 times with apple cider vinegar and water mix (50/50) once or twice if needed.
7. Wrap in unwaxed butcher paper at 160-165. (5-6 hours in usually)
8. Pull at 200 (probe more important than temp) and let rest in butcher paper no towel for 1-2 hours.
9. Wrap in towel and put in a cheap cooler (Not a yeti, it will steam in there) for 2 up to 10 hours until time to serve. (You can put it in the oven if more than 8-10 hours is needed, just keep it wrapped in the butcher paper)
Fire management is the name of the game. Pellet smokers are going to use a lower temp of 225 to get more smoke flavor in the meat and take a lot longer. If you have a small offset, you want to go at a lower temp as well because your brisket is going to get closer to the fire and not cook evenly. The biggest mistake I made in the beginning was trying to predetermine a time to cook. Its a moving target sometimes. Same size brisket on the same smoker with the same wood on a similar temp day may take 11 hours this weekend and 13 next weekend.
The key is to decide when you want to eat and then back up your time from there so you are not rushing. Let the rest time in the cooler be your buffer. I always prefer getting an early afternoon start on a brisket and staying up late... So when I am good and drunk the brisket is already wrapped. If I can get the sucker in the cooler by 3 AM it will be ready for an afternoon BBQ.
This is the best way for most. I am probably about to buy a new offset, but only because I want to make traditional Texas style brisket and if it goes over well in my part of the woods, I would like to get good enough on a pit to open my own BBQ place in a few years. If it was just friends and family, I would probably be getting a Yoder or Rec Tec pellet grill.
I use a thermoworks signals. You can rest assured your gauges are accurate and up to the minute this way.
This all excellent advice. No doubt that fire management is the key. Interesting that you relied on the original smoker temp gauge. Everything I read says move the gauge from the top to down near the grate.
Have you tested your thermometers? I bought some in the past that were 15-20 degrees out.