- Home
- Beef
- How To make Texas Barbecued Beef Brisket
How To make Texas Barbecued Beef Brisket
10 pounds Beef brisket
2 cups All-south barbecue rub -- see
2 cups Basic all-american bbq sauce
Recipe by: The Thrill of the Grill by Chris Schlesinger 1. Rub the brisket= thoroughly on all its sides with the barbecue rub, and allow it to come to= room temperature.
2. In the pit of a covered grill, build a very small fire on one side as=
far up against one wall as possible. Place the brisket on the grill on the= side opposite from the fire so that none of the brisket is directly over= the flame. Put the top on the cooker, pull up a chair, and grab the cooler.
This is where a person learns about the Zen of Barbecue. You gotta keep the= fire going, but very quietly. If you've got a thermometer on your covered= grill, you want to keep the temperature between 180 and 220 F. Remer, "Slow= and low is the way to go." You have to figure out your own personal= refueling policy. The one I like is one handful of coals or wood chunks to= every beer.
This goes on for about 8 to 10 hours or however long you can make it, the= longer the better. Don't be scared by the darkening of the exterior, the= outside of the brisket will be superdark
my personal favorite part.
3. Upon completion, pull the brisket out, trim off any excess fat, and=
slice it thin. Serve with barbecue sauce on the side:
no pro would ever= cover properly cooked brisket with sauce, he'd just dab on a touch.
Obviously the key here is a tremendous amount of patience and a day when= you want to do nothing but sit around. But the end product is one of those= great culinary events that results from spending a lot of time doing= something that is relaxing and enjoyable. Make sure you have plenty of tall= boys for eating this.
-Accompanying commentary=20 In my estimation, beef brisket just might be why the barbecue process was= invented. My research, sketchy as it is, shows that there was a strong= German immigrant communitu in Texas around the turn of the century. It has= some of these Germans working in the booming Texas cattle industry, and= others working in butcher shops, what with their strong background in= butchering and charcuterie. It being common knowledge that butchers are= constantly trying to turn tough or inexpensive cuts of meat into a usable= product that brings a higher cost (witness sausages and pates), it has= these German butchers faced with the brisket. This cut of beef is= particularly unwanted because of the huge percentage of fat that runs ont= only on the surface, but throughout the cut. Traditional technique would= braise or pickle this cut to tenderize it, but the brisket also has a lot= of beef flavor. In my personal opinion, a vey smart German butcher who ws= looking for a way to market this cut barbecued it. We're not talking here= about the open-pit roasting that was already popular in this area, but= rather closed-pit cooking, in which the cooking is done by convection= ratherr than conduction. It is similar to braising in theory, with the= smoke replacing the water. It is cooked at very low heat for a long period= of time, and the high fat content protects the meat from drying out but= also disappears through the 10 - 18 hour cooking process. What you are left= with is very tender meat with little or no fat and a tremendous smoky beef= flavor. I think the meat and the process were literally invented for each= other.
Now, I don't think that you will get any disagreement from the professional= barbecue industry when I say that brisket is the hardest to master--but,= hey, learning is half the fun. And, in the words of Remus Powers, famous= barbecue aficianado, "The best barbecue I ever had is the one on the plate= in front of me."=20 These are guidelines for the closed-pit barbecuing of brisket, a basic= technique with many variables which is wide open for personal= interpretations.
Chris Schlesinger
How To make Texas Barbecued Beef Brisket's Videos
Smoked Texas Brisket Recipe - Confit Brisket
Thank you for watching my smoked Texas brisket recipe. On this video, I took an E3 Meat Company brisket and smoked it Texas style using some SPG. Once the brisket was smoked, I rested/held the brisket in some wagyu beef tallow for 10 hours! This is by far one of the most flavorful briskets I've ever smoked. The flavor of this E3 Meat Co brisket was so beefy and the beef tallow took the flavors to a whole new level. This is a must try recipe.
#e3meatco
Thanks for watching
Smokin' Joe
Order your E3 Meat Co Beef Here -
AMAZON LINKS
Wagyu Beef Tallow -
Pistol Grip Injector -
16 Mesh Black Pepper Used In My SPG -
Pickling Spices -
Dukes Mayo -
Fleur De Sel (Salt)-
Cut Resistant Gloves -
Pizza Screens -
Nitrile Gloves (Black)-
RODE Mic Set Up -
Nikon D5600 Camera -
Order PS Seasonings Here -
Order Your Dalstrong Knives Here and Save 10% -
Order Your Hestan Cue Induction Burner here-(enter Smokinjoe at checkout for 20% off)
Order Your Custom Cutting board like the one used in this video here - Enter SMOKINJOES for a discount-
Order your Yoder Smoker Here -
Order Your PK100 Smoker Here and get 10% off - Order Your PK100 Smoker here -
Texas Pitmaster Reveals All Brisket Secrets | Chuds BBQ
This is my most ambitious brisket video to date. I try out all the secrets that I've learned and heard of throughout the years and throw them all into one brisket. If your looking to perfect your brisket recipe at home, don't sleep on this video!
Please LIKE and SUBSCRIBE
Patreon.com/chudsbbq
Insta: ChudsBBQ
►Full list of things I use and recommend:
_________________________________________
►Fogo Charcoal
►Thermometer
►Injector
►Meat Slicer
►High Temp Cheese
►Fryer
►Vegi Grill Pan
►Vitamix Blender
►Black Pepper
►Beef Tallow
►Pink Salt
►Mixer
►Chef Knife
►Sausage Stuffer
►Hog Casings
►Meat Grinder
Cabelas 1/2hp
►Food Processor
►Fire Blower
►Knife
►Slicing knife
►Boning Knife
►Thermometer
►Sodium Citrate
►Sheep casings
►Cimeter Knife
►Scale
►Rub Tub
►Burger Press
►Knife roll
►Butcher paper
►Paper stand
►Cutting Board
►Blowtorch
►Chef Knife
►Bone Saw
►Welder
►Angle grinder
►Grinder Blades
►Chop Saw
►Pipe Level
►Camera
►Lens
►Light
Texas Style Brisket on the Traeger with Matt Pittman of Meat Church BBQ | Traeger Grills
Get Matt's full recipe here:
Nothing says BBQ month and Traeger Day like brisket. Catch up over BBQ and BS with Traeger’s Chad Ward and Matt Pittman of Meat Church, right in his own backyard in the Lone Star State. They’ll walk you through the steps of cooking a Texas-style brisket on your Traeger—everything from trimmings to seasoning and pro-tips to elevate your brisket game for experts and beginners alike.
Meet Matt & Chad: 0:00
Trimming: 2:57
Seasoning: 11:48
Cooking: 15:27
Wrapping: 19:00
Unwrapping: 25:14
Slicing: 26:58
Tasting & What's Next: 29:02
Follow Traeger Grills:
Instagram:
TikTok:
Twitter:
Facebook:
Pinterest:
Grill Comparison:
Find a Dealer:
Find more recipes here:
#TraegerGrills #Brisket #NationalBBQMonth
Texas Style Brisket
Brisket
This is the recipe you come to Meat Church seeking. Texas brisket on an offset smoker. The Texas BBQ cooked the old school way by a Texan. Wood, fire & meat. No shortcuts, no electronics, no gimmicks. Just patience. And maybe a fair amount of cold beer....
There are a lot of ways to smoke briskets. In fact you have probably seen my 275 method which I typically use for a standard sized brisket that I need to get cooked in under 10 hours. However, this recipe is a very traditional Texas style and recipe that is going to take more hours to smoke and will yield and even better brisket. This process can be replicated as a pellet smoker or kamado style grill (indirect) brisket as well.
Meat Church Brisket Recipe:
Meat Church BBQ Supplies: meatchurch.com
Mill Scale 94 Gallon Offset Smoker:
Butcher Block - Rosewood Block: rosewoodblock.com
Thermapen IR thermometer:
Subscribe: | Website:
Watch the newest videos:
Follow Meat Church BBQ
Instagram:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Watch more videos!
Shop Playlist:
Recipes:
Beef Recipes:
Most Popular:
About Meat Church BBQ:
Welcome to the official Meat Church BBQ YouTube channel! Meat Church is a global lifestyle BBQ brand and has one of the largest social media reaches in the world of outdoor cooking. The unique brand offers some of the most popular craft BBQ seasonings, apparel, recipe development & live fire cooking instruction around the world. Matt Pittman is the pitmaster and the founder of Meat Church BBQ. He is an expert and respected authority on outdoor cooking. Students travel from around the world to attend BBQ schools in his private outdoor kitchen. Make sure to subscribe and enable ALL notifications!
#MeatChurchBBQ #Brisket #TexasBrisket
Smoked Brisket Recipe | Over The Fire Cooking by Derek Wolf
Perfect Smoked Brisket with @saltfirebbq ????????????
This is the ultimate tutorial on how to make perfect Smoked Brisket every time from @saltfirebbq. Go read his whole step by step walkthrough to becoming a brisket expert on our blow! So fricken delicious!
Recipe here:
Find all my rubs here:
Subscribe to my channel:
Why not follow me elsewhere?
Blog:
Instagram:
Facebook:
Pinterest:
Tik Tok:
#brisket #smokedbrisket #barbecue
Our Best Recipe for Texas Barbecue Brisket on a Charcoal Grill
Test cook Bryan Roof makes host Julia Collin Davison a tender and delicious Texas Barbecue Brisket.
Get the recipe for Texas Barbecue Brisket:
Buy our winning tongs:
ABOUT US: Located in Boston’s Seaport District in the historic Innovation and Design Building, America's Test Kitchen features 15,000 square feet of kitchen space including multiple photography and video studios. It is the home of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and Cook’s Country magazine and is the workday destination for more than 60 test cooks, editors, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.
If you like us, follow us: