BBQ beef shank

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19 Comments

    1. Venison shanks also work great for Osso Bucco, if you hunt or have a friend who does. I’ve successfully used white-tailed deer, elk, and even moose.

  1. 5 stars
    Looks delicious and I definitely want to try this. I am also wondering if you have a good brisket recipe? Thanks for the tips! I bought the new thermo dash back at Christmas and have been making better meats ever since!

  2. I’ve been seeing a lot of people doing very interesting things with shanks on youTube lately. I’m definitely going to save the shanks on the next elk or moose I harvest and try some of these ideas!

  3. I have a gas grill with a smoker tray that smokes for an hour. I used a beef broth and added lots of onions, some carrots, and some celery seed because I did not have celery. It came out awesome. I stripped all the meat and put it in the broth. I will take the meat out and put in carrots, celery, green beans, chopped zucchini, and corn. Add the meat back in and have osso bucco stoup.

    1. Question: I was thinking about putting a @ or 2 hour cold smoke (no cure) then wrapping in I want better control of temperature and refrigerating it for 3 days and then braise. My thinking is that I want the smoke flavor but better control of cooking temp which is easier in my electric oven than my stick burner smoker. Thoughts, advices suggestions?

    1. Because the meat is so so rich, I’d say a 5-pounder could easily feed 5 people, even though there’s a lot of bone weight. It’s hard to say, exactly, sorry.

  4. I’m 19 hours into a 8lb beef shank cook at 250 based off another recipe, just hit 194 degrees. My better half is doubting the RFX probe reading even though I put two in there.

    I checked multiple times with my Thermopen One and the probes are tracking, it’s just crazy the amount of time it is taking.

    I hope the meat won’t be dry.

    Next time I will run at a higher temp like indicated here.

    1. Nick K,

      Is where you are cooking this a high elevation? Because elevation affects the temp your meat is done at. For instance at an elevation at 10,000 feet, a brisket is done at about 195 degrees instead of the normal 204 for lower elevations. This may not be the issue but I experienced the same thing in cooking a brisket when I was vacationing in the mountains.

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