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Texas barbecue brisket, charcoal or gas grill 

Adam Ragusea
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**RECIPE**
beef brisket (I'd start with a half rather than a whole)
Isalt
pepper
garlic powder
pickles, buns, sauce, or other accompaniments
If the fat cap on the meat is too thick, shave it down a bit, but leave a good layer on there. Season the meat heavily with salt, pepper and garlic powder. Let the brisket sit in the fridge overnight, or smoke right away after seasoning.
Start smoking the brisket first thing in the morning.
If you're using a charcoal grill, ignite a handful of coals. Put some unlit coals along one side of the grill, and hold them back with some bricks or a drip pan, like I do in the video. Put the lit coals at one end of the unlit coals so that you'll have a narrow line of fuel that slowly burns across. Top the coals with some hardwood chunks to generate smoke.
Lay the grill grate on top and deposit the meat on the side opposite the fire. Put on the lid with the top vent directly over the meat, so that the smoke has to pass over the meat before it leaves. Choke off the bottom and top vents to restrict oxygen and keep the ambient temperature in the grill at 225-250ºF, 107-121ºC.
If you're using a gas grill, you may need to buy a smoking accessory. But if you have "flavor bars" covering your gas burners, you're good. Lay hardwood chunks on top of the flavor bars in a line over the front burner. Soak half of the chunks in water a little in advance to slow their burning. Ignite that front burner and taking it all the way down to low, or whatever temperature will allow you to maintain 225-250ºF, 107-121ºC inside.
Lay the meat on the back side of the grill away from the heat and close the lid. Most gas grills vent out the back, so this should force the smoke to pass over the meat on the way out. The wood chunks should just be smoldering - if they actually catch on fire, they'll make proportionally less smoke and heat up the interior of the grill too much. If they get too hot, you can turn off the gas and then pour a little water on the wood from a distance (there will be steam). Turn the gas back on and you should be good.
Whichever grill you're using, smoke the meat until you have a nice brown "bark" all around - three or four hours - using tongs to lift up the grates and replenish the fuel as necessary. At this point, you'll see juice pooling on top of the meat, and its internal temperature will plateau around 160ºF/71ºC. This is "the stall." The meat has taken all the smoke flavor it can, and you need to wrap it to retain moisture and let it braise until soft.
Wrap the meat tightly in aluminum foil or peach pink butcher paper (I prefer the foil, but the paper is traditional). Keep cooking at the same ambient temperature, 225-250ºF, 107-121ºC, and there's no need to keep any wood smoking at this point. You could do this last phase inside in the oven, if you want.
Braise the meat for another few hours until it's just barely fork tender - the internal temperature will real circa 200ºF/93ºC when done. Rest the meat like any other roast then slice against the grain. I recommend eating it with pickles, maybe some sliced onions, and nothing else.

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17 авг 2022

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Комментарии : 1,2 тыс.   
@fintanbochra
@fintanbochra Год назад
Another certified hood classic
@General12th
@General12th Год назад
Thanks, Shrek.
@PanarchyTheater
@PanarchyTheater Год назад
Range hood
@roddy2561
@roddy2561 Год назад
Real
@andreisecan5795
@andreisecan5795 Год назад
ong
@jakobbruhspenning
@jakobbruhspenning Год назад
Yes.
@HonedLegacy
@HonedLegacy Год назад
I love the approachability and ease with which you're sharing this info though, bbq is something everyone should learn how to do, and is a great way to feed a ton of people relatively cheaply when done well. However, as a Texan who has been doing 1-2 briskets a month this summer, I'm going to disagree on the 'endpoint' when you take it off. "The beginning of fork tender" is when the magic is just starting to happen. While Collagen has mostly converted to gelatin at about 190, it would be best to not pull the brisket until something like 201 at your thickest point, then rest for an hour in something like a cooler. This allows the gelatin to melt and disperse properly throughout the meat. When I've pulled and air rested at 195, I've typically ended up with some tougher bits, and usually a bit drier.
@happymanWTL
@happymanWTL Год назад
so it will become more juicy when you leave it on for a little higher temperature? how long do you usually cook yours for?
@RyanSimonLeon
@RyanSimonLeon Год назад
Yeah I always pull at 203 or later
@Kevin-zd5bi
@Kevin-zd5bi Год назад
Good on you for mentioning resting. That's a crucial point that probably needed addressed. Honestly if I made a video about smoking brisket, I might completely forget to mention it myself.
@seronymus
@seronymus Год назад
Will Adam own up to this gaffe and correct his info? Or will he let his liberal arrogance control him again?
@84sanderos
@84sanderos Год назад
@@seronymus It seems that something is wrong with you. I would advise you to talk to your doctor.
@ChudsBbq
@ChudsBbq Год назад
Gotta Love Brisket! Let me know if you ever want a Texas Offset Smoker, I will gladly build you one! ...and show you how to use it 😉
@dwcooke
@dwcooke Год назад
This guy right here is a bro
@linnaeus1281
@linnaeus1281 Год назад
Yo what's up Chud
@triaxe-mmb
@triaxe-mmb Год назад
Man! 2 of my fav YTers - you guys + MadScientist BBQ should do some 3 way Collab...OOOOO...and an episode on BBQ on The Regusea Pod!!!
@DefenderTIM
@DefenderTIM Год назад
Chudley, what a legend! Always willing to help the other guys up their game.
@tcmr5775
@tcmr5775 Год назад
Chud! Love ya content brotha, howdy from NTX!
@EarlMerGerdsGarage
@EarlMerGerdsGarage Год назад
I really appreciate Adam’s “the perfect is the enemy of the good” approach to barbecuing.
@thomasm1896
@thomasm1896 Год назад
I feel that way about 99% of things in cooking, but smoked brisket is not one. It is one of the few cases where I feel doing it as close to perfect as possible is worth it. The meat is expensive AF, and there's no substitute for perfect bark, thick smoke ring, and juicy tender brisket. If you don't have access to the tools or quality BBQ for sale, I understand making the best from what you have. I'm not a traditionalist in the sense of how you eat it. Brisket nachos, sandwiches, and tacos are all fantastic. I do wish he had collaborated with another RU-vidr like Jeremy Yoder of Mad Scientist BBQ or spoken to one of the many pit masters in central Texas. He often seeks out experts in many of his other videos, and I don't feel like this did central Texas BBQ justice.
@bobhob2790
@bobhob2790 Год назад
He went a little too far this time though, lets be honest... This is NOT Texas BBQ and the end result was just shameful. For a first timer, you can cut SOME slack, but this dude made an instructional video on how to do it. Anyone who uses the video as a guide is guaranteed to get terrible results so he deserves no slack at all and should get a lot more honest, non-sugarcoated criticism.
@razkrunk3169
@razkrunk3169 Год назад
I recommend added a fat source before wrapping your brisket. Traditionally pit masters use beef tallow and it makes the brisket extra moist since you're basically confit-ing your brisket. This brisket looked phenomenal Adam. I tend to like mine more on the overcooked side. Make sure you save your brisket leftovers for some chili.
@jaredhuang2225
@jaredhuang2225 Год назад
I also recommend adding fat/moisture when you wrap, I just use some of the fat I trim off the brisket, I put the fat in a separate small foil pan and put it on with the meat so its cooking the whole time the meat is. I put maybe 1 or 2 tablespoons in when I wrap and my briskets have come out much more "moist" ever since. Moist feel in BBQ is really just rendered fat sticking around, it has little to do with actual water moisture.
@frcShoryuken
@frcShoryuken Год назад
@@jaredhuang2225 Oh man, using the trimmed fat is a great idea
@Rainokoe321
@Rainokoe321 Год назад
Yeah, it works with other meats too. It's why a lot of pitmasters wrap pork ribs with butter for that extra fat. Tallow helps the moisture of brisket but it does soften the bark.
@SirBenjiful
@SirBenjiful Год назад
@@jaredhuang2225 “Moist feel in BBQ is really just rendered fat sticking around, it has little to do with actual water moisture” too true & this goes for all foods, not just BBQ. I’ve seen so many obsessed dieters try to cook “low-oil” versions of dishes, not understanding why it never comes out delicious & moist no matter how many watery ingredients they add - just soggy. Soggy is not moist.
@michaelt779
@michaelt779 Год назад
@@SirBenjiful My mother in law cooks steak in an electric skillet with water because she believes water makes it moist and tender. She doesn't even know how long she cooks it, she just spins the timer to maximum. It's so dry if feels like you're chewing paper towels.
@blackjam_alex
@blackjam_alex Год назад
Hank Hill: There's soot under my boy's nails, you don't get that from a clean burning fuel! Bobby Hill: You don't get the rich smokey flavor either.
@OceanAce
@OceanAce Год назад
"And I cook with propane. Gives me nice taste of meat."
@frcShoryuken
@frcShoryuken Год назад
@@OceanAce Taste the meat, not the heat 😂😂
@SylviaRustyFae
@SylviaRustyFae Год назад
Tbf, its plenty possible to use propane while smoking... So you know that Hank wud smoke a tasty hunk of meat with the right woodchips for flavour; he just isnt usin the woodchips to turn them into dirty charcoal to cook with. Tho also, i feel Hank probs prefer the taste of cold smoked meats either way heh
@ryantheriault4984
@ryantheriault4984 Год назад
Hank: Shut your mouth!
@rustyshackleford8170
@rustyshackleford8170 Год назад
@@ryantheriault4984 Now, we are going to sit here and pray.
@samb1532
@samb1532 Год назад
I've made a few briskets as a home cook; Just have a few things Adam doesn't mention. 1. If you're doing both the point and flat halves of the brisket, the grain direction changes between the two, so keep that in mind when slicing. 2. You can spritz water or vinegar if the brisket is a bit dry, which helps for gas grills. 3. Gas grills can get pretty hot even on low, one burner settings, so try and find an ideal temp early on. Don't come back in an hour to find a fully cooked brisket, as I have.
@hihihi19893
@hihihi19893 2 дня назад
prey pfp
@meatsmoke
@meatsmoke Год назад
A couple quick notes. 1 - Choking the fire too much causes dirtier (white) smoke and will add bitterness to the meat. This is fine if it's your preference of course, but generally cleaner (barely visible pale blue) smoke is preferred. If you don't have the cook chamber separate from the fire chamber, this can be hard to achieve. 1 way to fix this would be to have the vents more open and less fuel in the grill, replacing it as needed. If this isn't possible in your grill you could use a heat deflector to prevent direct heat. If your grill doesn't have one, you can use a cheap metal pan as a makeshift heat deflector. 2 - If you want a better bark with foil, you can use the boat method. It gives you most of the benefits of a foil wrapped brisket and a layer of bark you would get on a naked brisket. It's the method I use for both flavor and convenience. Nice video 👍
@foofrayoneplay
@foofrayoneplay Год назад
Username checks out
@raerohan4241
@raerohan4241 Год назад
What is the boat method?
@meatsmoke
@meatsmoke Год назад
@@raerohan4241 It's where you cover the bottom half of the brisket in foil but leave the top exposed. The foil is like a boat for the brisket.
@raerohan4241
@raerohan4241 Год назад
@@meatsmoke Thanks
@Greedman456
@Greedman456 Год назад
Great points. As a guy owning just a kettle in my apartment's balcony I can give my two cents about clean smoke on such an apparatus. Don't use normal wood. Get some good wood charcoal and only light 4-5 pieces, let the rest unlit. Make sure those lit pieces are well going before you start and position the vents directly over the fire. The chamber is small, enough smoke is going to go over the meat to smoke it during all this time. I have found that good wood charcoal smokes both sufficiently and providing good taste as well if it doesn't contain any additives(some of them do). And I wholeheartedly agree that clean smoke produces a far superior product and is not that hard to achieve
@notDemiurgo
@notDemiurgo Год назад
1:19 "you gotta start smoking first thing in the morning" wise words Adam
@snotnosedpunk7995
@snotnosedpunk7995 Год назад
Like a docta
@marshallc6215
@marshallc6215 Год назад
Barbecue is one of those things that has a very low floor and a *very* high ceiling. My dad taught himself to smoke like an engineer. Every couple weeks was a new batch of brisket or ribs with a slight tweak to the previous recipe to see how it would change things. The big thing I remember is him adding an acid mix of apple and pineapple juice (and other things idr) to the foil when he wrapped it, in addition to making a tent and boat rather than a tight wrapping, because he would baste the top of the meat near the end of the smoke and didn't want to ruin that crust. Leave-in temp probes made temp management easy because you weren't losing 30 degrees or more every time you went to check your meat and fuel. And as remote thermometer tech got better, he could literally plot his temperature curve and programmed his own fan to pulse as necessary, maintaining a particular internal temperature. A few years later, this became standard on crappy do-it-yourselfer grills like Traeger.
@nuuuuuuuut
@nuuuuuuuut Год назад
Are Traegers crappy? They certainly cost a lot.
@JonathanKayne
@JonathanKayne Год назад
Here is a good use for brisket: add it to a large homemade biscuit along with a poached egg and hollandaise sauce and feta cheese. A local biscuit eatery in Asheville NC used to have it on their menu, called the "brisket biscuit"
@ironboy3245
@ironboy3245 Год назад
Fuck you, now I'm hungry and need to go shopping tomorrow
@AlexChristian
@AlexChristian Год назад
Luella's in Asheville is a favorite of ours!
@firghteningtruth7173
@firghteningtruth7173 Год назад
Bro. 🤣🤣🤣 Upon 1st read, I just pictured a bun on the counter...then someone puts the entire uncut brisket on the tiny half biscuit, smooshing it...then gives it a nice little biscuit hat. Perfect. 🤣🤣🤣
@carolinepeterson7995
@carolinepeterson7995 Год назад
Biscuit Head? Looooved that place.
@enolopanr9820
@enolopanr9820 Год назад
@Newcious enemy spotted
@n0etic_f0x
@n0etic_f0x Год назад
One random small tip, to make your wood smoke more and last longer you can take lapsang tea. Do not brew it just put it in a shallow bowl with some water for about half an hour and add a thin line over the wood and have that on top.
@5m4llP0X
@5m4llP0X Год назад
@Newcious Not relevant. Do not click.
@dpclerks09
@dpclerks09 Год назад
@@5m4llP0X Damn. Should've read ahead. THANK YOU!
@dpclerks09
@dpclerks09 Год назад
I've never heard of this. Incredibly interesting. Can you share where you learned this from?
@n0etic_f0x
@n0etic_f0x Год назад
@@dpclerks09 It is tea that tastes like barbeque and people have tried ways to hold moisture against the wood better rather than just soaking a portion of it. I recall the tip of just using them in a small pan to get more smoke and just sort of combined that with the idea of keeping a portion of the wood damp cutting out the need for a pan.
@scottg.544
@scottg.544 Год назад
you might not want too, lapsang tea its traditionally pine smoked.
@CallMeCarpe
@CallMeCarpe Год назад
Having the same outdoor red chairs and fiesta plates as Adam really makes me feel validated
@domenicpolsoni8370
@domenicpolsoni8370 Год назад
Up here in Ontario, Canada we call those Muskoka chairs. I think they're called Adirondack chairs in the US.
@Thewretchedwilly
@Thewretchedwilly Год назад
Two things: 1. The quality of smoke goes up after you let it burn for a bit, you can smell the difference in smoke quality. 2. You don’t have to wrap the meat, known as the, “Texas crutch.” But it takes lots of time and patience to get past the stall otherwise.
@paulmorales1607
@paulmorales1607 Год назад
I love that you finally tackled Brisket because usually the videos done by pitmasters are more intimidating and your layback home cooked style is a nice fresh take
@danielbanks7500
@danielbanks7500 Год назад
I feel like a lot of those videos are aimed more at producing competition style brisket. I prefer brisket like Adam has done. I use commercial rubs or a homemade rub that has more than salt and pepper in it but that is up to personal choice. The rest is heat management really. It isn't hard. Will it be as great as a professional would make, probably not. Will you still love what you make? Yup because even less than perfect brisket is still a beautiful thing!!
@DreadKyller
@DreadKyller Год назад
I love the pitmaster's videos, but I have to agree, their target is explaining what they do for professional or competition cooking, it should be more of a goal to approach, rather than where to start. And while the results are fantastic the number of details can be overwhelming to those just starting. Adam's video here will server as a good entry point for those starting out, and over time people can start adding in more and more expert tips to improve, but even this simpler version will still taste fantastic.
@eliwhite5548
@eliwhite5548 Год назад
@@DreadKyller HowToBBBQRight strikes a good balance for me. He explains how and why pit masters do things, bur also talks about how he doesn't bother with a lot of it when he's just smoking something at home
@thegentlemandrummer8753
@thegentlemandrummer8753 Год назад
I would love to see a part 2 of this trying out the method from Leroy & Lewis BBQ and Chud’s BBQ where they do a “foil boat.” Where they wrap the bottom half in foil to help heat up the brisket, which allows more smoke flavor on top and access to see how tender it is, all while allowing more formulation for the bark. I’ve done it myself once and it was hands down the best brisket I’ve ever had!
@arthursun1337
@arthursun1337 Год назад
Leroy & Lewis is low-key the best BBQ place in Austin. I'd trust what they do
@rickcarey3820
@rickcarey3820 Год назад
Bradley and Adam joining forces would make for a great show!
@forlaughs272
@forlaughs272 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-oN-yl0M_zTA.html
@ThePieMaster219
@ThePieMaster219 Год назад
This is actually perfect, I ordered a weber kettle for my new move-in house and was trying to see if I could procure some brisket where I am; and here you are, with a video. Nice!
@michellee1190
@michellee1190 Год назад
When I first moved to Austin, a coworker from Bastrop introduced me to eating my brisket on crackers (saltine style crackers) instead of bread. I’ve yet to go to a BBQ place here in Texas that doesn’t have crackers when I ask for them. I really do prefer eating it on crackers than on bread. But pretty much everybody gets bread to go with the brisket. Nobody looks at me weird though.
@frankiemendez4601
@frankiemendez4601 Год назад
Grew up eating brisket with both bread and crackers. My dad from Lockhart prefers to eat with crackers.
@Asummersdaydreamer14
@Asummersdaydreamer14 Год назад
Any preferred brand name of saltines? I can put away a sleeve of store brand saltines for snacking, but love Blue box Premium brand saltines if I want to treat myself. I do not eat BBQ regularly, so I might try this combination next time!
@lifeofabronovich7792
@lifeofabronovich7792 Год назад
Hello fellow austinite! I gotta try that combo sometime.
@ThomasS17
@ThomasS17 Год назад
I've made my first brisket on New Year's Eve, smoked in a Weber kettle and finished in the oven. We ate it 26 hours after first putting it on the grates (including rest time), and it was amazing!
@40g33k
@40g33k Год назад
From SA, we don't really do brisket, but the few places that have had it made me love it so much. It's amazing.
@TheShayneMay
@TheShayneMay Год назад
What most Texas BBQ joints won't tell you is that when they say they only use salt and pepper on brisket is that the salt is Lowery's Seasoned Salt. Also west Texas uses mesquite, and I prefer that over post oak. Also, the traditional sides is pinto beans and potato salad, along with sliced white bread (Mrs. Baird's preferably).
@gonzaler99
@gonzaler99 Год назад
Hey, I'm out in west Texas 😊
@TheShayneMay
@TheShayneMay Год назад
@@gonzaler99 I am in the Austin area now, but my wife and I grew up in Odessa. 😀
@ichimaru96
@ichimaru96 Год назад
I should really stop watching Adam's videos when I'm hungry, cause they just make me want whatever he's cooking at the worst times possible, cause everything just looks delicious
@forlaughs272
@forlaughs272 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-oN-yl0M_zTA.html
@odinson4184
@odinson4184 Год назад
That brisket looks dry as hell
@Valhallavirtue
@Valhallavirtue Год назад
As a citizen of west central Texas I have to say that mesquite wood is the preferred wood to smoke on here. If you've never had mesquite smoked meat you are depriving yourself of one of the world's greatest pleasures.
@Valhallavirtue
@Valhallavirtue Год назад
Adam, I'm apparently not tech savvy enough to figure out how to message you directly. Sorry
@naufal.d.w
@naufal.d.w Год назад
love your videos adam, really hoping for a part 2 on this cuz this is the driest brisket i have ever seen.
@danielbanks7500
@danielbanks7500 Год назад
Awesome video Adam!! Thanks for hitting the important points and taking the needless mystique out of smoking brisket! It really is fairly bulletproof! I made a whole brisket yesterday in my Orion cooker. Start it up and walk away for 5 hours. Come back to awesome, tender, convection smoked brisket. On days where I have time though I go to the grill to do the smoking. So enjoyable to sit and enjoy a book between tending the fire, a beverage or few...beautifully spent time!
@stratmatt22
@stratmatt22 Год назад
dude toss that in the trash lmao
@domenicpolsoni8370
@domenicpolsoni8370 Год назад
I just found a new use for my 12 year old Webber charcoal grill (the one featured here). Thanks Adam!
@Ericisnotachannel
@Ericisnotachannel Год назад
I love this channel, simple, helpful ways to improve cooking. I already changed how I cook steak and my favorite cut of steak, now it seems I have everything I need to attempt smoking brisket.
@LoxyLight
@LoxyLight Год назад
While i don't personally care for brisket, i could watch adam's videos all day long
@JeremieBPCreation
@JeremieBPCreation Год назад
11:03 "But if you have some, you know, helpful comments, go for it. My best advice is relax and don't read a million things on the internet that get inside your head." You seem to point at yourself saying that. I'd agree with your advice. One of the most important things you do is get people informed and asking more questions about things like chemistry, history and anthropology and you bring that information in an entertaining format discussing one of the greatest pleasures in life. It's admirable really. Simply ignore the people who don't get that, no matter how highly they think of themselves. Let them leave their useless comments, they drive up the engagement metric anyway.
@JeremieBPCreation
@JeremieBPCreation Год назад
Engagement is useful to negotiate with sponsors to my knowledge.
@Kayotified
@Kayotified Год назад
This vid is perfect and came right on time as i have bought and trimmed a whole brisket (trimmings reserved for tallow of course) its in the freezer now because while i have done brisket before it is still intimidating but this vid made it look easy. im excited now . thanks!
@BrandonMorris88
@BrandonMorris88 Год назад
I started out my barbecue journey on a small Weber Spirit gas grill by loading up a foil tray with wood chips, covering it with foil, and putting a small hole in the middle. Like you, I put that foil 'boat' right on top of the 'flavorizer bars' and aimed for an ambient temp of 250. Following many experiments with this setup, I have since graduated to the Weber SmokeFire, which I am somewhat in love with and has yielded some outstanding barbecue. Here are my top tips for better brisket: - A dry brine isn't necessary but can help with more even seasoning. - Try to start off the cook at a slightly lower temp (180-200), as it allows the meat to impart more smoke flavor. I aim for around 2-3 hours at this temp before bumping up to 250. - I like to wait for the meat to get just past the stall (usually around 175 internal temp) before wrapping. - Rest time makes a massive, massive difference. I recently rested a brisket for 15 hours in a 170 oven and I believe it allowed the meat to relax, and ultimately yielded a more tender brisket.
@TheDanAge
@TheDanAge Год назад
I love brisket so much but I have been scared to try it on my charcoal grill this gave me the confidence I am trying it this weekend!
@frcShoryuken
@frcShoryuken Год назад
Don't stress about it too much. It might not be perfect, but I bet it'll still be amazing
@Tonyhouse1168
@Tonyhouse1168 Год назад
Can you email me some? I’ve barely had good brisket since I’ve moved out of Texas. Please..!
@MrKelsomatic
@MrKelsomatic Год назад
This might sound stupid but… I genuinely didn’t know you could smoke meat on a grill. I thought people calling them a “barbecue” was some weird mistake of the English language. I thought you needed a special smoker, wood chips, and all kinds of special gear. Thanks for showing that barbecue is way more accessible than I ever knew! 👏🏻
@chiblast100x
@chiblast100x Год назад
Here's something to add to that: The term "grill" in the sense used here is less than a century old and comes from the kettle grill coming into popularity during the era of post war suburban flight. The kettle grill was intended to facilitate emulating rural barbecue traditions when one couldn't dig a big pit (or build a specialized structure) and light a big fire. The titular grill itself is just the grating over the coals or fire. In the intervening period the use of propane and natural gas burners for grills and the introduction of newer smoker types has shifted the meanings further as each of them eroded the cultural chachet of the kettle grill and charcoal for either purpose.
@MrKelsomatic
@MrKelsomatic Год назад
@@chiblast100x huh, fascinating. Language is always such an weird archeological mess, haha
@chzcake44s
@chzcake44s Год назад
Where I live, in central Texas, most people I know call the type of charcoal cooker that Adam used a "grill" (nobody I know would call it a barbecue), but I never knew you could use that to smoke a brisket. Because around here we usually use what we call smokers, which are basically grills but with a separate chamber that's just for the fuel.
@dylanwilliams7868
@dylanwilliams7868 Год назад
I honestly don't think many RU-vidrs are having as much fun as Adam
@urmomgay
@urmomgay Год назад
Glad to see us represented in the brisket-smoking business! Most people think of West Texas BBQ, and Central Texas BBQ gets left in the dust. Even by our own! Most people in Austin don't truly appreciate the glorious barbecue scene in their city. Most of the business is from surrounding suburbs. Here's a good ol' howdy from Leander, TX!
@therecentlyundeceased
@therecentlyundeceased Год назад
Austin is just one huge suburb and then a few blocks of downtown
@vincentbarba7038
@vincentbarba7038 Год назад
Those "flavor bars" on the Weber are there to mimic/ recreate the flavor compounds generated from hot fat/juices that drip down and ignite on charcoal fires. Also, many pitmasters call for blue smoke which is generated from a very hot "clean" burning fire. Other fires that smolder make a white "dirty" smoke that may impart undesirable flavanoids; tastes may vary. Just sayin. Thanks for the video Adam. Love your work! I often learn new things from your videos/podcast.
@DreadKyller
@DreadKyller Год назад
I've seen some pitmasters at least say that while mostly a clean light blue smoke is the most desirable, that a slightly dirtier smoke at the very beginning (in the case of a brisket the first hour or two) before switching to clean smoke is better. So people have differing opinions. But it's all about heat management, it's fairly easy to control the smoke on an offset smoker, but it's not quite as easy to control the smoke the way he's doing it in the video. Cleaner smoke comes from the wood burning more completely, so higher temps for the wood will result in cleaner smoke. With this in mind you'd have to learn how much charcoal and wood to use at a given time to get clean smoke without the temperature getting too high. Wood burning more completely will produce more heat than the same wood burning less completely as it's a more efficient burn, this means you need less wood to reach the same temperature.
@jryancarpenter
@jryancarpenter Год назад
As just a homie that has a gas grill with these on them, I will say that my stuff doesn't really taste like gas grill stuff. My Burgs and Dogs have a really rich char flavor, somehow. (I also don't clean the grill that often and it's gotten into my head that this helps? who knows.)
@forlaughs272
@forlaughs272 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-oN-yl0M_zTA.html
@dreamof_me
@dreamof_me Год назад
Adam I appreciate videos like this. Your videos make BBQing way more accessible to me since I am estranged from male family members who have always refused to teach me. You make it so much less intimidating and the results have been tasty
@connormcdonald5075
@connormcdonald5075 Год назад
I hope you cook some kick ass BBQ and show them up!
@alnofali
@alnofali Год назад
I like how you addressed the imperfections 👌👌
@mumimor
@mumimor Год назад
I learnt a lot from this video! Thanks
@sleepawoken
@sleepawoken Год назад
As someone whose lived in Austin their whole life, I just want to say that that cut looked WAY too lean for any brisket that I'd usually go out of my way to eat Also Franklins is undeniably great and has an interesting story, but honestly there are plenty of good BBQ places around here that I'd go to first. I'd say order there once for the experience, then proceed to realize that most people there are tourists and employees that CEOs flew across the country to pick up lunch for them. Then go out and eat at the actual local BBQ places. edit: Also pickles are definitely paired with brisket around here, but I couldn't imagine eating it all without at least some sauce. BBQ sauce is just a whole extra dimension of the whole affair, and good sauce can elevate a BBQ joint from good to great. Just my personal take
@DreadKyller
@DreadKyller Год назад
I can agree on the sauce, but only a little. Too much and it overshadows the flavor of the meat itself. Well seasoned and cooked meat needs very little added to it, if you use sauce, please just don't drench it.
@totalbrootal
@totalbrootal Год назад
Fellow central Texan here, for me personally with brisket I can understand wanting a bit of sauce, but ultimately I believe that if the meat is good then you won't want the sauce getting in the way and overriding the flavor
@Tonyhouse1168
@Tonyhouse1168 Год назад
Thought the same thing when I saw the cut. Grew up in San Antonio and Dallas. Who buys pre-cut brisket?
@frankiemendez4601
@frankiemendez4601 Год назад
@@totalbrootalI agree. I'm from Austin and the sauce is only to compliment, but not diminish or drown the meat in it.
@macktripper556
@macktripper556 Год назад
It’s a flat and not a whole packer so that’s the issue.
@natexlb123
@natexlb123 Год назад
This is a great job for a pellet grill, I do a few briskets a year and I usually do them overnight. 9 hours unwrapped at 225° is pretty normal. Franklin spritzes his brisket with cider vinegar to increase moisture. My understanding is that the water helps the smoke flavor penetrate and the moisture is critical for getting that pink smoke ring. A probe style thermometer is also a great tool for long slow cooks. I tried making brisket in my kettle grill and I’ll say that Adam’s looked way better. Cheers!
@Devve6
@Devve6 Год назад
The spritz is usually half apple cider vinegar and half water and it's for cooling off the outside of the meat
@IceBergGeo
@IceBergGeo Год назад
Check out Chudd's BBQ for a good looking kettle brisket.
@natexlb123
@natexlb123 Год назад
@@Devve6 really? I’ve always used full strength apple cider vinegar, never noticed a sour note at all. Could be that I’m using store brand jug vinegar.
@Devve6
@Devve6 Год назад
@@natexlb123 you can use strait apple cider vinegar and it won't make it sour because it all evaporates. The reason that allot use vinegar water mix is because the vinegar evaporates faster then the water so the vinegar evaporates fast to cool off the surface right away and the water will evaporate slower so the effect lasts longer.
@LIamaLlama554
@LIamaLlama554 Год назад
Love the classic no-frills Weber! Less is more.
@philballphotography
@philballphotography Год назад
As someone who has smoked with both types of Grill I have found most propane grills to be a little to well ventilated, so I bunch up foil and block most of the gaps, leave a gap near the meat. That way the smoke and heat stays in there better and you can use a lower setting on the propane.
@TrueGilby
@TrueGilby Год назад
For seasoning, I like a thin layer of mustard all over the brisket before salt and pepper! It doesn't taste like mustard in the end, I promise. Also, an oven method, add a bit of liquid smoke to the mustard, cover the pan in foil and cook at 225⁰-250⁰F until done. Like 8 hours maybe? It's not a substitute, but it'll do, especially for sandwiches with a bunch of other ingredients.
@seronymus
@seronymus Год назад
I concur with this as a mustard fan though
@ARSENICKMUSIC
@ARSENICKMUSIC Год назад
I despise all types of mustard and I can attest that you can absolutely not taste the mustard when you apply it to a brisket and it makes the bark impeccable👍
@Corzappy
@Corzappy Год назад
Aw, Mustard!
@nicm9600
@nicm9600 Год назад
I like the way you make things even if it’s not strictly traditional or using the most advanced equipment or procedures. It’s what the average person would do and it makes it a million times more accessible. I too often get caught up in the gear acquisition syndrome and forget I can just cook stuff that tastes good without buying the a $1000 pellet smoker. (My Ooni pizza oven is worth every penny though)
@lukaswirmsberger6260
@lukaswirmsberger6260 Год назад
Haha these ovens seem to spread. They deserve it too.
@BlockCheddar
@BlockCheddar Год назад
Very nice segue Adam! I too use audible, though not often
@jacksonmay153
@jacksonmay153 Год назад
I smoked beef ribs for the first time the other week with the snake method and it was quite straight forward
@hartzellaerialproductions527
Adam, I’ve been doing barbecue for about 5 years now using offset smokers, electric and pellet smokers. I used to make my briskets just with salt and course ground black pepper but recently I used Lawry’s seasoning salt instead of kosher salt. Give it a shot, it’s fantastic!
@Falcodrin
@Falcodrin Год назад
Lawrys makes everything better
@frcShoryuken
@frcShoryuken Год назад
I read in a recent article about TX BBQ that most of the big name guys here not-so-secretly use Lawry's. They always say "It's just salt and pepper" but they kinda skirt the question by not specifying what kind of salt lol
@MLHunt
@MLHunt Год назад
​​@@Falcodrin This. Never lived in a house that didn't have Lawry's in the pantry, going back to when I was a boy.
@hartzellaerialproductions527
@@frcShoryuken I’ve seen some people saying that’s what they use too! Although I’ve never had brisket in Texas so i wouldn’t be able to compare if it tastes similar to mine when I use it. It definitely was a lot better than just salt and pepper!
@yourdadsotherfamily3530
@yourdadsotherfamily3530 Год назад
Try Slap Yah Mama’s Seasoning too! Their Cajun Hot sauce is bomb
@mattkuhn6634
@mattkuhn6634 Год назад
Plenty of other people have commented on the brisket/technique, but I'll chime in and say as a native Texan who lives in Austin that basically every Texas BBQ place will have the same rough set of accompanying items. Generally, you'll get sliced white sandwich bread, sliced onions (usually quarter moon slices with the grain), pickles (usually dill pickle slices, like you would see on burgers), and sauce on the side. Usually, the sauce you'll find in central Texas tends to be a vinegary tomato-based sauce that's usually not terribly viscous, but many places will also have sauces from other traditions such as Carolina mustard sauce or Alabama white sauce. The intent always seemed to be to use the bread and whatnot to make brisket sandwiches, and certainly many people do that, but it's certainly not wrong to just eat it with a fork. A properly-smoked brisket won't require a knife, as long as your fork is metal. There's a lot of variation in sides beyond these basic elements, but because of the German influence on central Texas, you'll also sometimes see vinegary potato salad in the German tradition, rather than a mayo- or mustard-based potato salad.
@ARMTOAST
@ARMTOAST Год назад
and a half pound of sausage and a side of home style mac n cheese, mmm. plus 5 pieces of fried okra you steal off your date’s plate
@rayanrahal2944
@rayanrahal2944 3 месяца назад
“You gotta start smoking first thing in the morning” If there’s one thing I love about Adam, it’s how he consistently encourages good habits and healthy lifestyles 😌
@Plain1nsane
@Plain1nsane Год назад
This was such a refreshing perspective on barbecue
@ForsakenSamurai87
@ForsakenSamurai87 Год назад
I know what I'm about to write is BBQ sacrilege but the end result is surprisingly good. I was fairly inebriated (when all the best ideas happen) and it was late around 11pm. Live in FL and everything other than Walmart was closed. I had a deep urge for a BBQ brisket sandwich. I had potato buns, spices, liquid smoke and a chuck roast. Also some pickles. I prefer garlicky half sours. So my cooking apparatus was an instant pot and an air fryer. I coated the chuck roast with some basic spices. Salt, pepper, garlic powder, some paprika. I cut the chuck down just enough to fit in the pot. It was about 2lb. I added a good amount, maybe 2 tbsp of liquid smoke to some water about half way up the side of the chuck. Braised in the instant pot on high for 40min and let slow release for about 15min I took the pieces out and let them cool down in the fridge a bit while I reduced the braising liquid down and skimmed a bit of the fat off. Added some honey, pureed some tomatoes I had that were getting old in my food processor and threw in a shot of whiskey I had. (Had Woodford reserve on hand) simmer that down and adjusted salt and sweet to taste to make an ok faux BBQ sauce. Once the sauce was done I took the chuck out and put it in my Airfryer to dry out and outside and make the bark. Probably 10 min in the Airfryer at 400 total. Opened up to slather a bit of my sauce every 3-4 minutes making sure it didn't burn. Let rest again just enough so I could cut nice. I was very surprised at the outcome and probably could tweak it to make better but didn't come out that bad when you have that drunk craving. Probably took me about 1.5 to 1.75 hours to do, start to finish. Super juicy, fall apart but with structure. Had the smoke flavor permeating the meat and the crispy half sours went great with the sweet and salty meat and sweet potato bun.
@danielbanks7500
@danielbanks7500 Год назад
Would you confuse that with actual brisket???Maybe if you were still toasted enough but probably not. Did you make something that sounds awesomely tasty in a fraction of the time at 11pm? Sure enough sounds like it! That is a win to me ;)
@SlavicCelery
@SlavicCelery Год назад
@@danielbanks7500 Wet roasting beef is a technique used in Chicago style Italian beef sandwiches. It can make some darned good beef. Is it like brisket? Not really, but tasty enough.
@danielbanks7500
@danielbanks7500 Год назад
@@SlavicCelery Sounds really good to me!
@Ithirahad
@Ithirahad Год назад
It's not BBQ sacrilege because it's not BBQ. My way of doing oven "brisket" involves heating at 375-400F to avoid the Danger Zone, slow-baking the thing at ~275 for a few hours until it's damn near burnt and a lot of the structure has broken down, then rehydrating with hot beef broth and stewing the thing at 350 for about an hour, which tends to soften it down and leave it tasting pretty good. I guess the rehydration step would be where you add the liquid smoke, but I've not tried that yet. Nothing like BBQ either, but I love it.
@shillwaffer2105
@shillwaffer2105 Год назад
Hey Adam: That pasty texture you're referencing can be a product of physically rubbing the "rub" into the meat instead of patting it in. idk the science behind it but I've witnessed the results.
@MixMeMcGee
@MixMeMcGee Год назад
Suuuuch a good reporting of our brisket! Thank you dude.
@amaZiahNX
@amaZiahNX Год назад
Used this method for ribs. Was great!
@hellothere4765
@hellothere4765 Год назад
For me personally I use a cheap pitboss pellet grill I got from Walmart, its a better method for me since I don't have to do heat management, with the pellets automatically keeping the heat at 225. Also for beginners, if the half brisket is still too big to cook for, I would do short ribs or chuck roast that's how I practiced my smoking.
@silentassassin47
@silentassassin47 Год назад
Goodbye there xD 😂😅 💀
@AngryAlfonse
@AngryAlfonse Год назад
Bro 100%. My folks got me the like $500 pitboss from Walmart last Christmas, has all the Bluetooth/wifi controls and built in thermometers, and I've fallen in love. I've done every sort of grilling in my life -- direct and indirect heat, propane, charcoal, propane + briquettes, campfire, smoker with a woodchip box, etc -- but I live alone and just can't be bothered to fire up a charcoal grill or smokebox just for me. Luckily I work from home, so with a pellet grill I can just toss whatever I want on there before I log on for work or the night before, and just monitor it from my desk using the phone app all day long. I've been getting 10/10 results every time.
@Nikki0417
@Nikki0417 Год назад
I'm interested in seeing you make a KC BBQ recipe or maybe a Monday video about the different kinds of BBQ in the US. I'm mostly just suggesting that because I'm in KC, but a video about the different types of BBQ (and maybe grilling vs. BBQ) would be really interesting!
@YummyPork
@YummyPork Год назад
As some commenters have noted below, take the fat trimmings and render them on the smoker. You will have smoked beef tallow that you can keep for later.
@MrCrabs231
@MrCrabs231 Год назад
Another nice thing you should check out and try is pellet grills and also pellet smokers. Some people say that you get a slightly softer smoke than with a traditional smoker, but they are fool proof and there’s a lot of wood and pellet combinations to make up and adjust for it. All you need to do as a cook is set the temp and make sure you don’t run put of pellets, and they’ve also became decently affordable over the past couple of years, so it’s a real win-win.
@leohartley155
@leohartley155 Год назад
Have you ever tried a Cornish Pasty ?
@techdude210
@techdude210 Год назад
As a Texan I hate how gate keeping the community can be around bbq this was a great explanation and felt like you really cared about the tradition. Thanks Adam
@jrock69
@jrock69 Год назад
dude its all bbq
@techdude210
@techdude210 Год назад
@@jrock69 I mean many cultures have different recipes. Imagine telling someone it’s just “curry”, “sushi” , “sausage”, etc. don’t be a dismissive goober.
@overtonesnteatime198
@overtonesnteatime198 Год назад
Between yours and Kenji's channel I cannot get enough, the podcast is quickly becoming a ritual for myself.
@nunya___
@nunya___ Год назад
Audible is Awesome. Funny SciFi, zombie and good contemporary fiction are my favs. Very good narration on "Where the Crawdads Sing".
@jonv8177
@jonv8177 Год назад
Awesome video Adam, a few tips. 1) as most people have recommended wrap with a little bit of beef tallow, or other fat. It really make a difference 2) It's usually best to smoke both the point, & flat together, separating after. The added fat from the point, helps to keep the flat "moist". 3) Gas gills produce allot of moisture, so they aren't ideal for slow cooking, but as you noted will work. 4) Always let the meat rest in its wrapper for a minimum of one hour. 5) As you noted butcher paper is better for "Bark", foil for texture. The foil "boat" method is also great. 6) Brinig the meat a day before helps if its not an ideal grade
@mono3739
@mono3739 Год назад
All the points I was thinking while watching the video! Thank you for saying it. Growing up in Texas and eating a Lot of brisket, (apologies to Adam), but I cringed when he trimmed off the fat cap. As he even mentions, fat retains aroma and flavor, so trim the fat = less flavor. Also, I missed the smoke ring, which I was always told was a very good indicator of long, low proper smoking of the meat. Another really entertaining video, thanks Adam. Regardless of opinions, I always learn something new.
@playgroundchooser
@playgroundchooser Год назад
For me, Hickory is the absolute best hardwood for smoking. It really makes pork products pop!
@playgroundchooser
@playgroundchooser Год назад
You know Adam has made it when these stupid bots show up. 🤣
@parkex9840
@parkex9840 Год назад
Montreal style smoked meat brisket is the bomb, texans should give it a shot. Life changing.
@mattmccaslin3355
@mattmccaslin3355 Год назад
Never smoked a brisket, but I've had good luck with reestablishing bark on a pork shoulder post wrapping by pulling it a bit early, unwrapping, and letting it tighten up in the residual dry heat from a charcoal grill.
@michaelcannon1168
@michaelcannon1168 Год назад
I've found an extremely thin layer of mustard can really help the salt and pepper adhere to the meat better. And I agree with a lot of the comments here that that the first brisket was trimmed far too aggressively for "Texas Style". This is far better than I would think a simple kettle grill would be capable of. I've been smoking briskets for years, and I still learned stuff from this video 👍
@davidcorley1893
@davidcorley1893 Год назад
Check out Chuds BBQ. He has a great video where he does a brisket on a Weber kettle and the results are amazing, better than a lot of brisket you can get in Texas.
@forlaughs272
@forlaughs272 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-oN-yl0M_zTA.html
@michaelcannon1168
@michaelcannon1168 Год назад
@@davidcorley1893 that is a fantastic channel. Good recommendation 👍
@Medic3000
@Medic3000 Год назад
cooking at a lower temp would have helped with the end product. I usually do a 14hr brisket, it spends about 7hrs at 200 deg F, >215 is far too high temp for initial smoke penetration and too quickly saps moisture from the meat. low/slow you can start it before bed, wake up, wrap with some tallow and bump temp to 225 until internal temp hits roughly 203-205 about 6 or 7 hrs, Let it rest in a cooler for 1-3hr and boom its perfection.
@matthewrs7
@matthewrs7 Год назад
Adam, in 2020 I switched from gas to charcoal BBQing and really went down the rabbit hole. Watching this video makes brisket so approachable! it took me a year to become brave enough to attempt a brisket. I have so much portioned brisket that I do sandwiches all the time. Also, you can throw brisket into a pan with Taco seasoning. Brisket tacos instead of ground beef is a MUST try. The strips break apart easily so you can have a mix between big and small meat pieces.
@forlaughs272
@forlaughs272 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-oN-yl0M_zTA.html
@tlniec
@tlniec Год назад
I love brisket, don't have a smoker, but do have a Weber gas grill similar to yours... I will have to try this out!
@CardboardWindowExe
@CardboardWindowExe Год назад
As someone who grew up in Austin, I wonder if this is what Italians feel like watching people make carbonara with bacon. Love the video Adam! The best brisket is the one you eat and even if I may have my qualms with this it looks delicious.
@chiblast100x
@chiblast100x Год назад
Yep, same kind of thing. It's also similar to, say, Uncle Roger reacting to Jamie Oliver's fried rice and the like.
@jspur22
@jspur22 Год назад
@@chiblast100x That rice was blasphemy.
@chiblast100x
@chiblast100x Год назад
@@jspur22 Definitely.
@penguinchris796
@penguinchris796 Год назад
to reduce the toughness that comes with a simple dry rub over night, raw onions diced and coating the brisket has always worked for me, and also imparts another flavour component
@Beryllahawk
@Beryllahawk Год назад
And now I'm hungry! Great video!!
@winsunwong5648
@winsunwong5648 Год назад
Looks great.
@mistermarch533
@mistermarch533 Год назад
Adam are you looking at my search history or what?! holy cow. This is not the first time i was looking for a certain food and adam comes out of nowhere with a video about it. Coincidence? I think not!
@silentassassin47
@silentassassin47 Год назад
Hahahaha 😂😆
@ansatsu83
@ansatsu83 Год назад
I have a few critiques about this, as a Texan.... Please don't soak your wood chips in water, why would you want to steam your brisket? Replace the chips as needed... You can get a pretty cheap electric smoker at home depot or amazon, mine is a masterbuilt. I think it was $220ish and will cause your brisket to fall apart as you remove it from the smoker. 225 Fahrenheit for about an hour a pound, it will take time to do, dont try to rush it. Anything above 225 is a bit too high of heat. Peach paper is a yes, to everyone else please don't use the Texas Crutch... it doesn't work. The seasoning you use is also what I use, as well... I tend to like some onion powder on top of mine as well, but thats just my taste.
@melvingibson4525
@melvingibson4525 7 месяцев назад
You're wrong about wetting the chips. Putting a water pan in is a classic pitmaster technique for this reason. In fact I think Aaron Franklin popularized it. He also popularized wrapping briskets. There's more than one way to pull off a cook. No reason to be a snob
@ansatsu83
@ansatsu83 7 месяцев назад
If you want more smokey flavor, dont steam your meat... When you use a water pan, you are creating steam, wood chips infuse this steam with the wood flavorings. If you want a more robust smoke, you dont use a water pan, as it dilutes the flavor. You might consider looking up documentaries on how wood chips are made and the food science behind smoking and the flavoring it adds. It will give you a better insight to the cooking process, which is why I posted the original post a year back@@melvingibson4525
@bierbrauer11
@bierbrauer11 Год назад
I’m partial to a 50/50 mix of oak and pecan, and prefer the flat as well but usually cook the whole packer. Good video!
@Leviathan_D7
@Leviathan_D7 Год назад
Seeing how I'm from Texas and I smoke a brisket every other weekend let me tell you what you did wrong... Haha kidding, good guide if you're wanting to start smoking brisket. Thank you for all the information you pass along to us.
@SylviaRustyFae
@SylviaRustyFae Год назад
7:20 You can also totes take all those drippings and make a delish sauce or gravy for it. Or what i often do cuz i actually dont like too crunchy (bad teeth) but love the taste of charred flavours; is ill take any drained liquid and reserve it then just add it back to the meat once ive got a charred/browned meat. Doesnt rly work as well with a thick hunk of meat like brisket, but it does work if you take and chop the brisket into strips and then add in the liquid and gently stir it all so the meat gets coated in its own juices. Ya probs wanna finish that with just a little more cookin too tho to rly cook those juices in a little, but just dont cook it long enuf to dry out ofc. Unless you have just the right amount of liquid to soak in completely, but usually i have a bunch of extra liquid so i can cook it down and into the meat to finish it. I do this all the time with cheeseburger mac i make for my fiance and he loves how much better that makes it taste when i make it heh. I dont even add addtl seasonings or anythin, just the brownin and then addin the juice back in gives that ground meat a ton more flavour. Cheeseburger mac is even a same food of his, hence the lack of extra seasonings bcuz i dont want to ruin a same food by changin it... But i didnt think of that when brownin the meat cuz thats just how i do it; and glad i didnt as i wudnt have known he loves it better that way if not for my assumin they alrdy did that when he makes it xD
@danielbanks7500
@danielbanks7500 Год назад
I often work meat drippings into a bbq sauce. Makes even the most crap bottled sauce 100X better!
@SylviaRustyFae
@SylviaRustyFae Год назад
@@danielbanks7500 Oooh yea, that wud def work wonders too; ampin up some of that cheap honey bbq sauce wud be a very good use of the drippings here.
@ApostleOfCats
@ApostleOfCats Год назад
This really sounds like a 11 year old wrote this
@SylviaRustyFae
@SylviaRustyFae Год назад
@@ApostleOfCats Thanks for the ableist criticism of my apparent lack of spellin ability. Im dyspraxic and type as i do cuz i typo a ton due to lack of good fine motor control and a tiny cracked phone. Dont judge ppl so quickly, ya nvr know what their life is like. And, as any 11 yr old can tell you, "If you have nothing nice to say, dont say anything" Other folks found my comment helpful and understood it fine; if ya needed clarity, ask and i can explain any shortenins i used. But you didnt want any of that; you just wanted to bully someone online.
@sid670
@sid670 Год назад
I still think that barbecue is the most american thing, both traditionally and metaphorically. A cooking process that turns cheap and undesirable meat into something beautiful. Also a lot of sugar haha
@yungboy4216
@yungboy4216 Год назад
not American enough, use corn syrup instead of sugar
@PredictableEnigma
@PredictableEnigma Год назад
It is. Hamburgers and hotdogs are made all over the world but it's REALLY hard to find American barbecue outside of America.
@gohabs9
@gohabs9 Год назад
@@PredictableEnigma hamburgers and hotdogs came from outside america to america though.
@Rembd
@Rembd Год назад
@@gohabs9 literally everything in modern america came from outside america, what's your point?
@ironboy3245
@ironboy3245 Год назад
@@PredictableEnigma yeah that's because of slavery. Slaves got the shit meat(when they got any meat), so they had to cook it low and slow to tenderise it
@danielreid207
@danielreid207 Год назад
Brisket Chalupas (Deep Fried Naan) are AMAZING!
@AscendtionArc
@AscendtionArc Год назад
Thanks for this :) .
@thepogpugchess
@thepogpugchess Год назад
Honestly good effort on making real Texas Barbecue
@semdejonge
@semdejonge Год назад
Thanks again for "Just keep it about casual good cooking" I love that about your channel.
@Virginiafox21
@Virginiafox21 Год назад
You really can do everything on a Weber kettle. Just needs a little more babying than a pellet grill, and a meater thermometer to wirelessly monitor temperature.
@ZacisBadatGuitar
@ZacisBadatGuitar Год назад
About to get my first barbecue. More barbecue videos, please!
@wpwbigcheese3795
@wpwbigcheese3795 Год назад
you killed me when you flipped it like a steak
@firghteningtruth7173
@firghteningtruth7173 Год назад
Saaame.
@_myst_4267
@_myst_4267 2 месяца назад
I come back here every so often to laugh at the Texans getting triggered.
@Osteoporos1s
@Osteoporos1s 3 дня назад
Same, they're so soft despite always acting as though they're tough af. It's pathetic.
@Physicshelper
@Physicshelper Год назад
Put some water in the dripping pan will help keeping the meat moist.
@filipefmelo
@filipefmelo Год назад
Ha, we have exactly the same setup! Cheers!
@MarcusHouse
@MarcusHouse Год назад
This looks amazing. I've become a big fan of your channel here Adam. Really awesome down to earth stuff. One tip I've been using is your method of chopping onions. Great life hack. :) Congrats on the channel.
@gwyn9759
@gwyn9759 Год назад
I love bridget from guilty gear
@QTpitarianne
@QTpitarianne Год назад
Bridget
@DouglasUphoff
@DouglasUphoff Год назад
Completely agree
@IRLtrolls
@IRLtrolls Год назад
Born and raised Texan here. You can make some incredible brisket in an oven. Just rub the brisket down with a very small amount of liquid smoke, doesn't take much. Cover in Salt, pepper and garlic powder. Throw in a roasting pan at 250° for 6-7 hours and it's great. Also the point cut is way better than the flat cut. We can get world class cuts of brisket at any grocery store here but the best is HEB.
@ScottFree4all
@ScottFree4all Год назад
Nicely done, Adam. The only advice I can give you to get you closer to TX brisket nirvana is: lower and slower, 225 F max!; use post oak wood specifically and don't soak it unless you absolutely have to so as to not steam cook the meat; S&P only for seasoning. I can tell you did your research! Now, please excuse me while I drive to Angelo's BBQ in Ft. Worth for a fix!
@tcmr5775
@tcmr5775 Год назад
I think I'm gonna hit up 407 BBQ tonight! :D
@ScottFree4all
@ScottFree4all Год назад
@@tcmr5775 Nice! I tried them back when the restaurant was just a wooden trailer.
@macktripper556
@macktripper556 Год назад
225 is no longer the standard.
@DBD120
@DBD120 Год назад
Hey, how should I handle meat in relation to everything else. Like, can I touch spice bottles after handling meat and so on, where do you draw the line?
@catchamp1880
@catchamp1880 Год назад
I imagine it follows standard raw meat rules, wash your hands after handling or use gloves. a good way to deal with spices is to have all your spices in a disposable dish, so you can just use it and then throw it out.
@Scotty-vs4lf
@Scotty-vs4lf Год назад
@@catchamp1880 yeah either a disposable dish or a small washable dish, but it wouldnt make sense to dirty a big bowl for 2tbsp of spices
@oblivionsought7809
@oblivionsought7809 Год назад
Use the wet hand/dry hand method. Choose to only touch the meat with one hand (probably your primary hand) then use your other hand for stuff like opening grill hoods, touching the spice shaker, etc. Or just wash your hands a lot.
@JonathanKayne
@JonathanKayne Год назад
You are typically in your kitchen when you you are applying a rub to meat so I typically wash my hands often between touching the meat and applying the spice. Though I only do it because I don't want sticky meat juice on my spice bottles. Alternatively you can use gloves but I think they aren't very necessary in a home kitchen
@DBD120
@DBD120 Год назад
@@catchamp1880 Another curiosity that I've had is handling meat with tongs, one side of the tongs will more than likely handle the raw side; so how is contamination avoided in that common situation?
@selewachm
@selewachm Год назад
I've recently purchased an SnS Kettle Grill which is basically a Weber kettle but with all the modifications. I will hold 250F for hours. Lucky enough to live in Central Texas. Only 10 miles from Snow BBQ in Lexington, Tx.
@MisterBroseph
@MisterBroseph Год назад
I’m a pitmaster here in Texas. I’ve worked in a couple of the top spots here. Nice job! Couple of tips I’d like to add: Highly recommend getting one untrimmed and learn how to trim yourself. You have a lot more control with how much of a fat cap you have, and you prevent the unfortunate yet common event of having bald spots from a pre-trimmed that’ll end up drying out. Plus you can take the excess and grind it for burgers or rendering the fat out for tallow. Slow and low BBQ is the only time I recommend getting a pre-ground 16 mesh black pepper. Fresh cracked can go acrid a lot more easily, and the flavors that come with grinding it fresh are completely muted by the end of the cook. And you can be more generous with it to ensure you’re getting a really solid bark. Use something like a thin layer of mustard on the brisket to help the seasoning stick. The extra water pan is recommended, especially with the heat being closer to the brisket in a charcoal grill than an offset. The water in the brisket just isn’t enough. Once you’re a couple hours in, I also recommend spritzing some apple cider vinegar over the meat. Keeps the surface from cooking too quickly. When wrapping your brisket, you’re gonna want to either spray down under and over the brisket with apple cider vinegar, or spreading a fat like beef tallow. This will prevent it from drying out at the last stint of the cook. Once you take it out, highly recommend wrapping plastic wrap over the butcher paper and letting it rest it in something like a YETI cooler overnight. This is what the best places do, really helps keep moisture trapped in the meat with no chance of escaping. Hope you give these a try next time!
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