Me and my son’s first attempt at making brisket.

by MRBROKEAF

42 Comments

  1. onestepahead0721

    It’s the time you spent with your son that counts!

  2. Agitated-Philosophy7

    How? Why? Don’t leave kids unsupervised

  3. Is it perfectly cooked? No. Would I absolutely demolish it? You bet your ass.

  4. Heliccoppter

    I mean you could technically still make birria with it…?

  5. Melodic-Matter4685

    First time I made it smoker kept stalling out. 20 hours later it was done. Every scrap disappeared.

  6. Agitated-Philosophy7

    Keep on grilling. My first brisket was poop too. The second one was way better

  7. YoungDumbHsKid

    looks like ya need some seasoning! try again!!

  8. BeautyAndTheDekes

    Eat it. Make notes. Proceed with second attempt at brisket.

  9. juicebox5889

    Even if it isn’t as good as you wanted it to be, chop it fine and vacuum seal it. Then use it in quesadillas, tacos, Mac and cheese, rotel cheese dip and anything else you can think of.

  10. jesonnier1

    Shred the shit out of it. Make tacos/quesadillas. The lime, cilantro, onion, salsa(s), etc will give it good life.

    Keep on cooking.

  11. Time and method? I can give some pointers. Love making brisket on my Weber.

    It looks underdone from the photo. The first brisket is never easy to make.

  12. 2836nwchim

    Probably wasn’t the end result you wanted. As others have said, it can be salvaged. Keep trying.

  13. hg_blindwizard

    Dont give up and keep asking questions or asking for tips

  14. thejonathanpalmer

    That looks a little well done for my taste, but I bet it still tasted good, so all credit to you.

    I think next time, I’d keep a closer eye on it, and check the internal temp frequently, and do the wobble test. As brisket master Aaron Franklin says, even when brisket isn’t great, it’s still pretty damn good. Enjoy!

  15. Quirky_Discipline297

    Never forget the advantages of owning a well-braised whole brisket. Triple strain the reduced braising liquid (no veggies in the liquid except maybe mushrooms and white onions) then make reduction sauce or gravy.

    BBQ definitely has its place but so does braising. But this r/grilling

  16. FangShway

    Yep that’s one of those things that takes a bit of practice to get perfect but A for effort.

  17. terrydennis1234

    Looks slightly over cooked but it still looks amazing nice job

  18. Some tips… Next time, whole brisket, not just a flat. IT’s a lot of meat, but you have slices from the flat, can cube the point up for burnt ends, and whatever you don’t eat, freeze the rest and use it in things like baked beans in the future.

    A whole brisket handles the long cook way better than just the flat, and will almost definitely be cheaper per pound. You *DO* want to get it to 195-200. The trick is getting there whithout drying it out. If you can find prime brisket, while it’s a little pricey (around here it’s $6 per lb vs 3 for choice) it gives you a little leeway with the extra intramuscular fat. I almost never wrap my brisket, I just wait for it to get around 190, and then I start checking it. It’s done if a fork goes into it without resistance (you can poke it once it’s past the stall but never before, the later the safer) Some briskets are done at 193 some will need to go all the way to 200.

    Trim your brisket, or ask your butcher to kindly do it. Remove hard, ugly fat, and leave around 1/4 inch of that white creamy fat. Find or make a rub you like. I find the rubs on the shelf tend to have too much salt or sugar as their main ingredient. I prefer something that is black pepper forward, with onion, garlic, quality paprika. There’s some salt in my rubs, but not nearly as much in the store bought. Use a binder to keep the rub on, mustard or mayo both work fine and you won’t taste either. Apply your rub the day before the cook, not just in time.

    Cook it fat side toward the heat. Some types of grills or smokers heat from the bottom, some from the top. My offset heats from the top. My pellet grill heats from below. 225-250 is the temp I cook at. Oak, hickory, mesquite are all good woods. I avoid most fruit or nut woods for brisket but they’re fine to use. Cherry and Pecan are the best of those IMO. If you’re not getting enough smoke, a tube or maze device works well to augment.

  19. Infinite_Try8600

    Get some string and make a catcher’s mitt out of it!

  20. You gave it a decent shot, brisket is a bear to cook, so much so I don’t bother anymore. Too costly, too hard.

  21. ItchyIndependence154

    Chop it up and add some bbq sauce. My go-to for brisket cooks that didn’t go how I planned.

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