EMERIL'S TEXAS-STYLE SMOKED BRISKET
Steps:
- Set the brisket on a large sheet of plastic wrap. In a medium bowl combine the dark brown sugar, chili power, paprika, salt, garlic powder, onion powder, black pepper, cayenne, dry mustard, and cumin thoroughly. Rub the mixture onto the brisket and wrap tightly in the plastic wrap. Place on a baking sheet and let marinate refrigerated at least 6 hours or overnight. Remove the meat from the refrigerator and let come to room temperature.
- Soak mesquite wood chips in a large bowl of water for 1 to 2 hours. Remove, drain and set aside.
- Remove the meat from the refrigerator and let come to room temperature.
- Prepare a smoker with charcoal and the wood chips according to the manufacturer's instructions to 180 to 200 degrees F. Place the water pan in the smoker and add water to the fill line, about 2/3 full. Place the unwrapped brisket on the lower rack off the direct heat, close the lid, and cook, regularly stoking the fire and adding additional chips, until an instant-read thermometer registers an internal temperature of 185 to 195 degrees F., or until the meat is tender, about 4 to 5 hours. Remove the meat from the grill and let rest for 20 minutes before carving the meat against the grain.
- (Alternately, prepare a stove-top smoker according to the manufacturer's instructions. Place the unwrapped brisket on the rack over low heat. Close the lid and smoke for 1 hour. Preheat the oven to 275 degrees F. Remove the meat from the smoker and wrap in a large sheet of heavy aluminum foil. Place on a baking sheet and roast until tender and an instant-read thermometer registers an internal temperature of 185 to 195 degrees F., or until the meat is tender, about 2 to 3 hours. Remove the meat from the oven and let rest for 20 minutes before carving the meat against the grain.)
- Serve with Barbecue Sauce on the side for dipping.
- In a large pot, heat the oil over medium-high heat. Add the onions and cook, stirring, for 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook, stirring, for 1 minute. Add the ketchup, brown sugar, cane syrup, vinegar, mustard, Worcestershire, hot sauce, Essence, and red pepper flakes and bring to a boil. Lower the heat and simmer, stirring occasionally, until thickened and the flavors marry, 15 to 20 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool slightly before serving.
- Combine all ingredients thoroughly and store in an airtight jar or container.
- Recipe from "New New Orleans Cooking", by Emeril Lagasse and Jessie Tirsch. Published by William and Morrow, 1993.
BARBECUED TEXAS BEEF BRISKET
Steps:
- Make dry rub:
- Mix first 5 ingredients in small bowl to blend.
- Transfer 1 tablespoon dry rub to another small bowl and reserve for mop. Spread remaining dry rub all over brisket. Cover with plastic; chill overnight.
- Make mop:
- Mix first 6 ingredients plus reserved dry rub in heavy medium saucepan. Stir over low heat 5 minutes. Pour 1/2 cup mop into bowl; cover and chill for use in sauce. Cover and chill remaining mop.
- Following manufacturer's instructions and using natural lump charcoal, start fire in smoker. When charcoal is ash gray, drain 1/2 cup wood chips and scatter over charcoal. Bring smoker to 200°F. to 225°F., regulating temperature by opening vents wider to increase temperature and closing slightly to reduce temperature.
- Place brisket, fat side up, on rack in smoker. Cover; cook until tender when pierced with fork and meat thermometer inserted into center registers 185°F., about 10 hours (turn brisket over for last 30 minutes). Every 1 1/2 to 2 hours, add enough charcoal to maintain single layer and to maintain 200°F. to 225°F. temperature; add 1/2 cup drained wood chips. Brush brisket with chilled mop in pan each time smoker is opened. Transfer brisket to platter; let stand 15 minutes. (Can be made 1 day ahead. Cool 1 hour. Wrap in foil; chill. Before continuing, rewarm brisket, still wrapped, in 350°F. oven about 45 minutes.) Combine barbecue sauce and chili powder in heavy small saucepan. Add any accumulated juices from brisket and bring to boil, thinning sauce with some of reserved 1/2 cup mop, if desired.
- Thinly slice brisket across grain. Serve, passing sauce separately.
TEXAS-STYLE SMOKED BRISKET
This take a little extra time but well worth it. Got this recipe off Emeril Salutes Houston, TX episode.
Provided by Kaccy G.
Categories Meat
Time 6h
Yield 6-8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 31
Steps:
- Set the brisket on a large sheet of plastic wrap.
- In a medium bowl combine the dark brown sugar, chili power, paprika, salt, garlic powder, onion powder, black pepper, cayenne, dry mustard, and cumin thoroughly.
- Rub the mixture onto the brisket and wrap tightly in the plastic wrap.
- Place on a baking sheet and let marinate refrigerated at least 6 hours or overnight.
- Remove the meat from the refrigerator and let come to room temperature.
- Soak mesquite wood chips in a large bowl of water for 1 to 2 hours.
- Remove, drain and set aside.
- Prepare a smoker with charcoal and the wood chips according to the manufacturer's instructions to 180 to 200 degrees F.
- Place the water pan in the smoker and add water to the fill line, about 2/3 full.
- Place the unwrapped brisket on the lower rack off the direct heat, close the lid, and cook, regularly stoking the fire and adding additional chips, until an instant-read thermometer registers an internal temperature of 140 to 145 degrees F, about 4 to 5 hours.
- Remove the meat from the grill and let rest for 20 minutes before carving the meat against the grain.
- (Alternately, prepare a stove-top smoker according to the manufacturer's instructions. Place the unwrapped brisket on the rack over low heat. Close the lid and smoke for 1 hour. Preheat the oven to 275 degrees F. Remove the meat from the smoker and wrap in) BBQ Sauce: In a large pot, heat the oil over medium-high heat.
- Add the onions and cook, stirring, for 4 minutes.
- Add the garlic and cook, stirring, for 1 minute.
- Add the ketchup, brown sugar, cane syrup, vinegar, mustard, Worcestershire, hot sauce, Essence, and red pepper flakes and bring to a boil.
- Lower the heat and simmer, stirring occasionally, until thickened and the flavors marry, 15 to 20 minutes.
- Remove from the heat and let cool slightly before serving.
- Essence: Combine all ingredients thoroughly and store in an airtight jar or container.
LOW AND SLOW TEXAS OVEN BRISKET
For years R. B. could not stop falling for the latest food magazine pitch for perfectly smoked, tender beef brisket. Finally, after a twelve-hour ordeal of tending the fire and at least six episodes of wrapping and unwrapping and mopping, Min led him from the patio and into the kitchen and showed him around. Since that breakthrough, brisket is what's for dinner much more often. Whether you're cooking indoors or out, the brisket's best friend is heavy-duty aluminum foil to trap moist heat and smoke. R. B.'s reformed oven method for brisket is to wrap it once, tuck it in a warm oven, and go to bed. Who needs melatonin with the aroma of a brisket wafting through the house in the wee hours? Be prepared to wake up ravenous.
Yield makes 8 to 10 servings
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- HEAT the oven to 250°F.
- SCATTER the onion and garlic in the middle of a sheet of heavy-duty aluminum foil large enough to generously wrap around the meat. Lay the brisket on top and rub all sides with the dry rub. Pour the bottled smoke and Worcestershire over the meat.
- SEAL the foil around the meat. Carefully place the foil pack in a large roasting pan. Roast the brisket for 7 to 9 hours, until the internal temperature is at least 190°F and the meat is pull-apart tender.
- REMOVE the brisket from the oven. Open the foil and allow the juices to collect in the pan. Move the brisket to a cutting board and thinly slice it against the grain. Serve with the warm meat juices.
TEXAS-STYLE BRISKET
Provided by Food Network
Categories main-dish
Time 12h45m
Yield 15 to 20 servings
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- Prepare a smoker for cooking at 250 to 275 degrees F.
- Trim the fat cap on the brisket to 1/4 inch, then trim out the top and bottom fat. Trim the lean flat edges so the meat is at least 1 1/2-inches thick.
- Stir together the salt and pepper in a bowl until well blended to make the rub.
- Shake an even layer of the rub on all surfaces of the brisket that will be exposed to the smoke. Do not pack the rub into folds or cracks, since that will turn the rub into a soggy paste.
- Place the brisket in the smoker with the fatty point closest to the firebox. Smoke for 2 hours, rotating the brisket occasionally for even coloring and to prevent the edges from drying out. Spritz the brisket liberally with apple juice and continue smoking the brisket, spritzing every 30 minutes, until the meat has a dark mahogany color and the internal temperature reaches 203 to 205 degrees F, another 10 to 12 hours. Wrap the brisket tightly in unwaxed butcher paper and let rest 45 minutes to 1 hour before slicing and chopping. Serve with Original BBQ Sauce if using.
- Combine the ketchup, vinegar, Worcestershire, molasses, brown sugar, hot sauce and lemon juice together in a large pot and whisk until blended. Place over medium heat and bring to a simmer, then add the chili powder, granulated garlic, onion powder, salt, pepper and cayenne. Continue to simmer for 30 to 45 minutes, stirring occasionally to keep from burning.
AMERICAN KITCHEN CLASSIC TEXAS STYLE SMOKED BRISKET BBQ
Texas BBQ has four different styles of BBQ. In the East Texas style, the beef is smoked over hickory wood and then the brisket is chopped into fine pieces, like pulled pork style. In the Central Texas style, the meat is smoked over pecan or oak wood and then the brisket is served sliced. In the West Texas style, the meat is smoked over mesquite wood and is also served sliced. The South Texas style depends on how far from the Mexico border you are. Barbacoa, a style of Mexican BBQ is cooked with mesquite wood and is the most common form of BBQ in South Texas. South Texas 'American Style' BBQ is more along the lines of the rest of Texas. All of these types are served with the sauce on the side so that it can be applied as the diner wishes. This recipe is for those who have a smoker to use and if you have the room, feel free to smoke more than one brisket. Freeze the others (leave in foil, just off grill) for later.
Provided by Member 610488
Categories Roast Beef
Time P1DT15m
Yield 1 beef brisket
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Thoroughly combine all dry rub ingredients. Rub mixture into the meat, wrap tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 8 hours or overnight. Store leftover mixture in an airtight jar or in freezer.
- Allow brisket to come to room temperature, and then arrange in a smoker. Put the brisket on the grill fat side up.
- You want a good steady low fire with a temperature between 200/225 degrees F at the meat level with cooking time at about 1 1/2 to 2 hours per pound. There is a ratio to the smoking - total cooking time = smoking time + last eight hours wrapped double in heavy-duty aluminum foil over a smokeless fire.
- Remove wrapped brisket from smoker and let stand for at least 15 minutes before opening and slicing. If necessary, you can throw this in an ice chest immediately after coming off the grill and it will stay "Hot" for several hours. Slice diagonally across the grain and trim off fat. Serve with American Kitchen Classic Texas Style BBQ Sauce - recipe #482550.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 5964.9, Fat 276.4, SaturatedFat 95.4, Cholesterol 2249.9, Sodium 10147.3, Carbohydrate 71, Fiber 21.8, Sugar 30.9, Protein 763.1
SMOKED BRISKET SOUTH TEXAS STYLE
This recipe has been passed around between me and my friends for a long time. I don't know who originally came up with it but it is simple to cook and worth the wait. The only problem you may encounter is regulating the temperature on your pit.
Provided by Sgt. Pepper
Categories Meat
Time 10h10m
Yield 20 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 3
Steps:
- Prep your pit with your favorite wood.
- I prefer pecan for the mellow flavor.
- Optimum cooking temperature will be between 200 to 250 degrees.
- Trim excess fat from brisket and place in smoker.
- Let it slow smoke for 2 hours or until you have a good smoke ring around it.
- Remove from smoker and rub it down with a stick of butter and then rub in the brown sugar.
- Wrap in tin foil and place back in the smoker cooking at 1 hour per pound while maintaining slow smoked temperature.
- If the temperature is too hard to control then you can cook as above for the first two hours or until you get a good smoke ring, add butter and brown suger, wrap in tin foil and cook in oven at 225 degrees for the remaining cooking time.
REAL TEXAS BRISKET (SMOKED) (SOUTHWEST)
This is the real deal--it doesn't get any better than this. You'll need a smoker, that uses wood (not electric), and one that you can control the temperature on. A kettle BBQ pit (like a Webber) using indirect heat might work, but they tend to get too hot. A pit smoker with a separate fire box is best. For best results, use hickory or pecan. Mesquite is good too, but tends to be a little bitter when smoking for very long periods of time. Prep time does not include marinating over night or the time necessary to get the smoker going.
Provided by Pokey in San Antonio
Categories Roast Beef
Time 8h30m
Yield 12-16 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Trim brisket leaving 1/2" layer of fat on top. Determine the direction of the grain of the meet and cut off a slice across the grain. This way when the meet is done, and covered with a dark brown crust, you'll be able to see which direction you should slice.
- Brush with 1/4 cup of lemon juice (bottle juice is fine).
- In a bowl, combine lemon pepper, oregano, celery salt, garlic salt, and seasoned salt.
- Rub brisket with 1/2 of this mixture, cover with plastic wrap and chill overnight.
- Remove brisket and let it come to room temp before cooking. Putting a cold piece of meat in a smoker is a sure fire recipe for disaster--the meet will be very bitter.
- Prepare your smoker according to the manufacturer's direction. Heat the smoker to 225°F at the cooking level.
- Place the brisket in the smoker, fat side up.
- Keep the temperature as close to 200°F as you can for the first 2-3 hours by adjusting the air intake, and adding small pieces of wood every 30 minutes. Do not adjust the out vent, it should always remain full open. You know your cooking properly when there is very little smoke coming out of the smoker, and the hot air coming out of the top vent is clear for the first foot, then it turns to a grayish white smoke. If smoke is billowing out of every opening, the smoke is cold and the air flow is too low--your brisket will taste like tar. You can let the temperature creep up to 225°F , but not much over that.
- In a small bowl, combine the Worcestershire sauce, and remaining lemon juice and rub mixture.
- Mop on the sauce every hour as you turn the meat. Be sure to turn the meat over and also rotate to ensure even cooking. This should be the only time you open the cooking area.
- Smoke 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 hours per pound, until the internal temperature is 190°F . If you go much past that, your brisket will not slice up, and you'll have pulled beef.
- Remove and wrap in aluminum foil. Let the meat rest for about 1 hour.
- Cut the point (the pyramid shaped portion) off following a natural fat layer between the point and the flat.
- Trim off excess fat.
- Slice the brisket across the grain, using the starter slice you should have done at the beginning as a guide. Slices should be 1/4" thick. If a portion of brisket is falling apart rather than slicing, don't despair. Save the shredded portions and the burnt ends. They will make the best BBQ beef sandwiches later, when chopped and mixed with BBQ sauce.
TEXAS-STYLE SMOKED BRISKET
Steps:
- Combine first 5 ingredients. Place 2 T mixture in a blender. Set aside remaining mixture. Remove 2 chiles and 2 T sauce from can; add to blender. Add 1 C chopped onion and next 3 ingredients to blender; process smooth. Combine brisket and chipotle mixture in zip-top plastic bag; seal. Marinate in refrigerator 24 hours, turn occasionally. Soak wood chunks in water 16 hours; drain. Remove brisket from bag, pat dry, and rub with remaining sugar mixture. Let stand 30 minutes. Remove grill rack and prepare grill for indirect grilling, heating one side to medium-low and leaving one side with no heat. Maintain temperature at 225°. Pierce bottom of disposable aluminum foil pan several times with the tip of knife. Place pan on heated side of grill; add half of wood chunks. Place another foil pan (do not pierce pan) on unheated side. Pour 2 C water in pan. Coat grill rack with cooking spray and place on grill. Place brisket on rack over foil pan on unheated side. Close lid; cook 3.5 hours or until meat thermometer registers 170°. Add additional wood chunks halfway during cooking. Preheat oven to 250°. Remove brisket from grill. Place sliced onion and jalapeño on large sheet of foil. Top with brisket; seal tightly. Place brisket in large baking pan. Bake at 250° for 1.5 hours or until thermometer registers 190°. Remove from oven. Let stand, wrapped, 1 hour. Unwrap brisket, reserving juices; trim and discard fat. Cut brisket across grain into thin slices. To prepare sauce, finely chop sliced onion and jalapeño; set aside. Place brisket juices in zip-top plastic bag inside 2-cup glass measure; let stand 10 minutes (fat will rise to the top). Seal bag; carefully snip off bottom corner of bag. Drain 1/2 C drippings into saucepan, stopping before fat layer reaches opening; discard fat and remaining drippings. Add onion, jalapeño, broth, and remaining ingredients to pan; cook over medium heat 5 minutes or until thoroughly heated.
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