Brisket confit

28 Comments

  1. I was particularly interested in your admonition to not let the meat get above the boiling point of water lest it dries out. It might be useful to point out that the boiling point decreases as one goes up in altitude. For example, in Denver, the mile-high city, water boils at 201 degrees Fahrenheit, not 212 as it does at sea level. In Leadville, Colorado’s highest town at 10,000 feet, the boiling point is 193 degrees.

    1. David,

      I honestly hadn’t considered this option. If you were to do it, you’d need to make sure your slow-cooker operated within the correct temperature range. MINE only says “high” and “low,” so I’d first check what those mean. Otherwise, great idea!

  2. Why not bring the oil up to 200 degrees and then put into a 200 degree oven? That would eliminate the need for much oil monitoring.

    1. Samer,

      Honestly, you could probably do it that way. Just make sure your oven is maintaining a proper temp, not overcooking the meat. I used a Smoke the other day at home to check my oven temp and found it to be 49°F higher than stated. If you know your oven’s state, go for it. If not, stove-top flames are easier and faster to adjust than ovens are,and that is something to be aware of.

    1. Rob,

      As Modernist Cuisine has shown, making confit in a Sous Vide bath is very effective, and if you have a circulator, go for it! I (*hides face in shame*) don’t have one at home yet.

  3. I have made Duck Confit many times in the past. Never thought about beef brisket. So i had a party on New Years Eve. Had 24 people over. so i made two beef confit. On using a Brisket Flat and used shortening with a little lard and the other was done in beef tallow i had in my pantry.

    The brisket flat done in the Beef Tallow was absolutely breathtaking!!!!!!

    I made the confit on Friday morning and served it at 11pm on Sunday.

    Thank you for making this an easy cook!

    1. Yes, that is correct! Other brisket parts will work also, but do separate the point from the flat before cooking in this case.

  4. If you are storing the confit, how do you reheat it best ?? I see the comment about being sure to crisp the reheated brisketbut what is the step prior to that?? Just reheat confit & cooking fat in a sauce pan??

    1. Jack,

      Yes, reheating it in a saucepan is a great way to do it. An oven at ~300°F is a good way, too, but then crisp it under a broiler or in a pan with its own fat.

  5. So once the meat gets to 203, then set the timer for 3 hours? How long does it typically take for the meat to get to that temp?

  6. You instruct to crumble Bay Leaves in dry rub mix which is later rinsed off; saving thyme sprigs, garlic and bay leaves to add to hot-fat cook. How do you accomplish collecting all the crumbled Bay leaf pieces? Thyme twigs and smashed garlic I could recollect but bits of Bay leaf seems time consuming or impossible. Would rinsing off the leaves with other spices, (capturing twigs and bulbs – no problem), then adding another fresh Bay Leaf to the confit cook, work? Yes, I hate to waste any spices due to cost but I could go crazy attempting to locate crumble pieces.

    1. Fair point. I think what I meant was to break the bay leaf into pieces, but leaving them whole will do.

  7. Happy to have found your recipe; I have a moose roast in the freezer that I’m hoping to use in your recipe to slightly replicate a fondue I had in the 60s when I was around 5. I never forgot that little pot of olive oil and garlic cloves cooking those chunks of moose to garlicky oily perfection.

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