Brisket burnt ends on toothpicks

13 Comments

  1. Will the Billows fan work with my Masterbuilt Electric Smoker? If so, how and where is it attached?

    1. David,
      No, it will not. Electric smokers regulate their own temperature, and Billows is made for smokers that don’t have any kind of internal temperature control. Your electric smoker has a built-in temperature control already.

  2. I have a question, should i let the point rest after pulling from smoker, HOW LONG before i cut pt. into cubes, or cube it right after i pull it off the smoker…???? I cubed it right after cook put back on smoker for 20 min. seemed DRY and TOUGH. HELP, not wht i waned, 7 hrs cook, not a good finished product… 235 degree smoke till 165 then wrap till 200 ???? cut pt. then cubed. thks for any help…

    1. Lawrence,
      That method sounds pretty good in theory…strange that they were tough. Getting up to 200°F should have taken care of the texture. It is possible that the probe wasn’t in the thermal center and that it wasn’t cooked that high in the middle.
      It is also possible (not knowing what you used) that the brisket itself was not great.
      No, you don’t rest before cubing, but do cut it up immediately and put it back on the smoker. I’m not sure what happened with your cook, but I hope it works better for you if you try it again! Feel free to get hold of me with any other questions.

  3. It is possible, isn’t it, to cook a decent brisket on a gas grill, on indirect and using aromatic wood chips or chunks to generate smoke? After all, there’s no better temperature control (outside of an oven) than in a gas grill, assuming you don’t run out of gas, of course (in which case, your ambient air alarm should alert you).

    I haven’t done it myself, but am thinking about it. Have you guys tried it? Not that it’s quite comparable to a brisket, but I hot-smoked a brined salmon fillet that way on indirect, and it came out great. (Of course, salmon only needs to get to 125 F before removal, and no collagen to gelatinize.) You gotta start somewhere!

    Also, I know that it’s a “smoke”, but is there any logic to covering the brisket in foil at any point, the way one might do with turkey, to keep the more superficial layers from drying out? Or is that sacrilegious in the low-and-slow brisket smoking game?

    Thanks for this blog. I’ve realized that a lot of grilling recipes out there use time, rather than temperature, as an end-point because they don’t consider the use of thermometers, which allow a truly much more reliable result. The ideas and recipes here allow me to also modify the cooking techniques I see in otherwise enticing recipes elsewhere, to account for the fact that I can actually do them right, using the magic of temperature feedback and control!

    1. El,
      Yes, you can absolutely do this on a gas grill as long as you get tath temperature in the right place! It may take a bit of fiddling with the flame before you find the constant temp you want, but it should work great. One thing to watch is that the temperature may vary based on external variables. If you cook overnight, for instance, your grill temp may go a little lower because the outside air is cooler and sucks the heat out more readily. Use an air probe to monitor the temp just to make sure that no external temperature fluctuations affect your grill temp adversely.
      Happy cooking!

  4. Good Afternoon,

    That sounds like a great recipe for Burnt Ends.
    I currently have a Electric Smoker but plan on upgrading soon.
    My question is in regard to the Smoker pictured in the article.
    It looks like the Weber Smoker? What size was the brisket used on the
    Weber Bullet Smoker. The step separating the point from the flat sounds awesome.
    Thanks.

  5. Hi Martin,
    I too noticed that you were using a Weber smoker. I’m curious if you use the water pan when cooking your brisket?
    Also, do you normally crutch your brisket?
    Thanks!

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