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Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables.

Temperature of Brisket



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 12:26 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Craig Winchell
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 41
Default Temperature of Brisket

I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker temp-
accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185 degrees (with an
accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry. Even at 175 degrees,
it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat, insulate it in a towel and stick it
in an Igloo. Last time I tried 168, and it was a bit underdone when I took
it off (by the fork twist method) but by the time it sat in foil in a towel
in an Igloo for a few hours, the flat was slightly overcooked when we
finally got around to eating it. So my question is, assuming that it;s
going to be foiled and insulated for a few hours prior to eating, at what
temperature should I take it off? I know I'm getting closer, but somehow,
it just seems wrong to take it off below 160 degrees, because I've never
seen such a low temperature documented anywhere. The problem is that it
keeps cooking in the foil, even though no heat is being applied. Anyone
have this problem in the past? Oh, the point was perfect, by the way. The
temp readings, however, were taken in the flat around the geometric center.


  #2 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 02:28 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Edwin Pawlowski
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,701
Default Temperature of Brisket


"Craig Winchell" wrote in message
...
I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker temp-
accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185 degrees (with
an accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry. Even at 175
degrees, it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat, insulate it in a towel
and stick it in an Igloo. Last time I tried 168, and it was a bit
underdone when I took it off (by the fork twist method) but by the time it
sat in foil in a towel in an Igloo for a few hours, the flat was slightly
overcooked when we finally got around to eating it. So my question is,
assuming that it;s going to be foiled and insulated for a few hours prior
to eating, at what temperature should I take it off? I know I'm getting
closer, but somehow, it just seems wrong to take it off below 160 degrees,
because I've never seen such a low temperature documented anywhere. The
problem is that it keeps cooking in the foil, even though no heat is being
applied. Anyone have this problem in the past? Oh, the point was
perfect, by the way. The temp readings, however, were taken in the flat
around the geometric center.


Packer cut? Does not seem right.. I'd guess that cooking at 225 is causing
the problem by just taking to long to get to temperature, thus drying the
meat. Crank up the heat to 250 to even 300. I've never see a brisket that
was considered "done" at 170. Don't trim the flat down to naked either.
You need some fat to keep things moist.


  #3 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 03:04 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Craig Winchell
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 41
Default Temperature of Brisket


"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
et...

"Craig Winchell" wrote in message
...
I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker temp-
accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185 degrees (with
an accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry. Even at 175
degrees, it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat, insulate it in a towel
and stick it in an Igloo. Last time I tried 168, and it was a bit
underdone when I took it off (by the fork twist method) but by the time
it sat in foil in a towel in an Igloo for a few hours, the flat was
slightly overcooked when we finally got around to eating it. So my
question is, assuming that it;s going to be foiled and insulated for a
few hours prior to eating, at what temperature should I take it off? I
know I'm getting closer, but somehow, it just seems wrong to take it off
below 160 degrees, because I've never seen such a low temperature
documented anywhere. The problem is that it keeps cooking in the foil,
even though no heat is being applied. Anyone have this problem in the
past? Oh, the point was perfect, by the way. The temp readings,
however, were taken in the flat around the geometric center.


Packer cut? Does not seem right.. I'd guess that cooking at 225 is
causing the problem by just taking to long to get to temperature, thus
drying the meat. Crank up the heat to 250 to even 300. I've never see a
brisket that was considered "done" at 170. Don't trim the flat down to
naked either. You need some fat to keep things moist.


Yes, a packer cut, yes, I leave a layer of fat, around 1/4". a 12 lb
brisket gets done somewhere around 12 hours at 225 degrees in my smoker, and
that's far less time than I've seen in the literature. Yet, the set
temperature corresponds accurately to an oven thermometer set randomly on a
rack, and being that it's a commercial smoker oven, one would expect it that
way, being that it's well insulated with a good convection system. Bottom
line is that I'm dealing with from slightly less to slightly more than 1
hour per lb. It takes maybe a half hour more to get up to 175 from 165, and
if I were shooting for 185, it would take about another half hour again. As
I say, I believe the residual cooking that takes place in the well insulated
foil-wrapped brisket off the heat to be the culprit to my overcooked
brisket. I think that all in all, I'm pretty comfortable in the 175-180
range if I'm slicing the thing for eating straight from the smoker. By the
way, everything takes far less time with the convection smoker than with my
offset. I attribute it to better, more even heating.

Craig Winchell





  #4 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 03:50 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Grant Erwin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 63
Default Temperature of Brisket

Craig Winchell wrote:

"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
et...

"Craig Winchell" wrote in message
...

I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker temp-
accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185 degrees (with
an accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry. Even at 175
degrees, it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat, insulate it in a towel
and stick it in an Igloo. Last time I tried 168, and it was a bit
underdone when I took it off (by the fork twist method) but by the time
it sat in foil in a towel in an Igloo for a few hours, the flat was
slightly overcooked when we finally got around to eating it. So my
question is, assuming that it;s going to be foiled and insulated for a
few hours prior to eating, at what temperature should I take it off? I
know I'm getting closer, but somehow, it just seems wrong to take it off
below 160 degrees, because I've never seen such a low temperature
documented anywhere. The problem is that it keeps cooking in the foil,
even though no heat is being applied. Anyone have this problem in the
past? Oh, the point was perfect, by the way. The temp readings,
however, were taken in the flat around the geometric center.


Packer cut? Does not seem right.. I'd guess that cooking at 225 is
causing the problem by just taking to long to get to temperature, thus
drying the meat. Crank up the heat to 250 to even 300. I've never see a
brisket that was considered "done" at 170. Don't trim the flat down to
naked either. You need some fat to keep things moist.



Yes, a packer cut, yes, I leave a layer of fat, around 1/4". a 12 lb
brisket gets done somewhere around 12 hours at 225 degrees in my smoker, and
that's far less time than I've seen in the literature. Yet, the set
temperature corresponds accurately to an oven thermometer set randomly on a
rack, and being that it's a commercial smoker oven, one would expect it that
way, being that it's well insulated with a good convection system. Bottom
line is that I'm dealing with from slightly less to slightly more than 1
hour per lb. It takes maybe a half hour more to get up to 175 from 165, and
if I were shooting for 185, it would take about another half hour again. As
I say, I believe the residual cooking that takes place in the well insulated
foil-wrapped brisket off the heat to be the culprit to my overcooked
brisket. I think that all in all, I'm pretty comfortable in the 175-180
range if I'm slicing the thing for eating straight from the smoker. By the
way, everything takes far less time with the convection smoker than with my
offset. I attribute it to better, more even heating.

Craig Winchell


I think the key here is that this is a convection system. I think the way the
air is forced around the meat is drying it out.

GWE
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 04:14 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Edwin Pawlowski
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,701
Default Temperature of Brisket


"Grant Erwin" wrote in message

I think the key here is that this is a convection system. I think the way
the
air is forced around the meat is drying it out.

GWE


Yes, I didn't catch that the first time. Blowing all the moisture out.


  #6 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 03:57 PM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Olde Hippee
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 47
Default Temperature of Brisket

On Feb 24, 7:26 pm, "Craig Winchell" wrote:
I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker temp-
accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185 degrees (with an
accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry. Even at 175 degrees,
it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat, insulate it in a towel and stick it
in an Igloo. Last time I tried 168, and it was a bit underdone when I took
it off (by the fork twist method) but by the time it sat in foil in a towel
in an Igloo for a few hours, the flat was slightly overcooked when we
finally got around to eating it. So my question is, assuming that it;s
going to be foiled and insulated for a few hours prior to eating, at what
temperature should I take it off? I know I'm getting closer, but somehow,
it just seems wrong to take it off below 160 degrees, because I've never
seen such a low temperature documented anywhere. The problem is that it
keeps cooking in the foil, even though no heat is being applied. Anyone
have this problem in the past? Oh, the point was perfect, by the way. The
temp readings, however, were taken in the flat around the geometric center.


Craig, do you wrap the meat at any time whilst still cooking? I would
try that after 165 degrees in tightly sealed foil til meat reaches
185. We do that outside on our smoker. The meat can only absorb so
much smoke and by then it surely has the flavor. With the convection,
you may want to wrap sooner.
Good Luck, Nan & Rich
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 08:53 PM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Fatboy[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Temperature of Brisket

On Feb 24, 6:26*pm, "Craig Winchell" wrote:
I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker temp-
accurate). *I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185 degrees (with an
accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry. *Even at 175 degrees,
it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat, insulate it in a towel and stick it
in an Igloo. *Last time I *tried 168, and it was a bit underdone when I took
it off (by the fork twist method) but by the time it sat in foil in a towel
in an Igloo for a few hours, the flat was slightly overcooked when we
finally got around to eating it. *So my question is, assuming that it;s
going to be foiled and insulated for a few hours prior to eating, at what
temperature should I take it off? *I know I'm getting closer, but somehow,
it just seems wrong to take it off below 160 degrees, because I've never
seen such a low temperature documented anywhere. *The problem is that it
keeps cooking in the foil, even though no heat is being applied. *Anyone
have this problem in the past? *Oh, the point was perfect, by the way. *The
temp readings, however, were taken in the flat around the geometric center..


The answwer can be found he http://www.theqjoint.com/forum/showthread.php?t=38
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 25-02-2008, 10:21 PM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Dave Bugg
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,620
Default Temperature of Brisket

Fatboy wrote:
On Feb 24, 6:26 pm, "Craig Winchell" wrote:
I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker
temp- accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185
degrees (with an accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry.
Even at 175 degrees, it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat,
insulate it in a towel and stick it in an Igloo. Last time I tried
168, and it was a bit underdone when I took it off (by the fork
twist method) but by the time it sat in foil in a towel in an Igloo
for a few hours, the flat was slightly overcooked when we finally
got around to eating it. So my question is, assuming that it;s going
to be foiled and insulated for a few hours prior to eating, at what
temperature should I take it off? I know I'm getting closer, but
somehow, it just seems wrong to take it off below 160 degrees,
because I've never seen such a low temperature documented anywhere.
The problem is that it keeps cooking in the foil, even though no
heat is being applied. Anyone have this problem in the past? Oh, the
point was perfect, by the way. The temp readings, however, were
taken in the flat around the geometric center.


The answwer can be found he
http://www.theqjoint.com/forum/showthread.php?t=38


Please don't promote your forum/blog/website here. If you have an answer,
post it here; but don't use this NG as a pathway to your site.



  #9 (permalink)  
Old 26-02-2008, 04:01 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Bill[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 411
Default Temperature of Brisket

In article tbHwj.962$JU3.853@trndny04,
says...
Fatboy wrote:
On Feb 24, 6:26 pm, "Craig Winchell" wrote:
I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker
temp- accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185
degrees (with an accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry.
Even at 175 degrees, it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat,
insulate it in a towel and stick it in an Igloo. Last time I tried
168, and it was a bit underdone when I took it off (by the fork
twist method) but by the time it sat in foil in a towel in an Igloo
for a few hours, the flat was slightly overcooked when we finally
got around to eating it. So my question is, assuming that it;s going
to be foiled and insulated for a few hours prior to eating, at what
temperature should I take it off? I know I'm getting closer, but
somehow, it just seems wrong to take it off below 160 degrees,
because I've never seen such a low temperature documented anywhere.
The problem is that it keeps cooking in the foil, even though no
heat is being applied. Anyone have this problem in the past? Oh, the
point was perfect, by the way. The temp readings, however, were
taken in the flat around the geometric center.



snipospam



Please don't promote your forum/blog/website here. If you have an answer,
post it here; but don't use this NG as a pathway to your site.


Spamming is the only way the googlegoobers know. BTW, no need
to help them with his spamming. please snip the payload.

Bill
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 26-02-2008, 04:24 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Dave Bugg
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,620
Default Temperature of Brisket

Bill wrote:
In article tbHwj.962$JU3.853@trndny04,
says...
Fatboy wrote:
On Feb 24, 6:26 pm, "Craig Winchell" wrote:
I've been doing brisket lately at 225 degrees F (convection smoker
temp- accurate). I've found lately that with a meat temp of 185
degrees (with an accurate thermometer), the flat is coming out dry.
Even at 175 degrees, it's dry if I foil it to preserve heat,
insulate it in a towel and stick it in an Igloo. Last time I tried
168, and it was a bit underdone when I took it off (by the fork
twist method) but by the time it sat in foil in a towel in an Igloo
for a few hours, the flat was slightly overcooked when we finally
got around to eating it. So my question is, assuming that it;s
going to be foiled and insulated for a few hours prior to eating,
at what temperature should I take it off? I know I'm getting
closer, but somehow, it just seems wrong to take it off below 160
degrees, because I've never seen such a low temperature documented
anywhere. The problem is that it keeps cooking in the foil, even
though no heat is being applied. Anyone have this problem in the
past? Oh, the point was perfect, by the way. The temp readings,
however, were taken in the flat around the geometric center.



snipospam



Please don't promote your forum/blog/website here. If you have an
answer, post it here; but don't use this NG as a pathway to your
site.


Spamming is the only way the googlegoobers know. BTW, no need
to help them with his spamming. please snip the payload.


Or I can just kill-file you. Bye.


  #11 (permalink)  
Old 27-02-2008, 01:32 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Denny Wheeler
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 984
Default Temperature of Brisket

On Mon, 25 Feb 2008 22:21:13 GMT, "Dave Bugg"
wrote:

Please don't promote your forum/blog/website here. If you have an answer,
post it here; but don't use this NG as a pathway to your site.


Dave, I don't know if what's on that page is 'the' answer, but it does
look like a good way to do brisket. Didn't see any obnoxious ads, nor
did I have to do anything other than click the link.

I'm thinkin' we might cut FatBoy some slack--QJoint looks like a legit
good site whose contents are on topic here.
(obviously only my opinion)

"Every single religion that has a monotheistic god
winds up persecuting someone else."
-Philip Pullman
--
-denny-
(not as curmudgeonly as I useta be)
  #12 (permalink)  
Old 27-02-2008, 03:23 AM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Dave Bugg
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,620
Default Temperature of Brisket

Denny Wheeler wrote:
On Mon, 25 Feb 2008 22:21:13 GMT, "Dave Bugg"
wrote:

Please don't promote your forum/blog/website here. If you have an
answer, post it here; but don't use this NG as a pathway to your
site.


Dave, I don't know if what's on that page is 'the' answer, but it does
look like a good way to do brisket. Didn't see any obnoxious ads, nor
did I have to do anything other than click the link.

I'm thinkin' we might cut FatBoy some slack--QJoint looks like a legit
good site whose contents are on topic here.
(obviously only my opinion)


The objection I had was posting the 'you can find the answer here at this
website which is in desperate need for participants'. If he wants to put the
website in his sig line, no big deal. But if he wants to answer a question,
then I think he should just answer it on this NG.
--
Dave
www.davebbq.com


  #13 (permalink)  
Old 27-02-2008, 04:12 PM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Brick[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 884
Default Temperature of Brisket


On 26-Feb-2008, "Dave Bugg" wrote:

Denny Wheeler wrote:
On Mon, 25 Feb 2008 22:21:13 GMT, "Dave Bugg"
wrote:

Please don't promote your forum/blog/website here. If you have an
answer, post it here; but don't use this NG as a pathway to your
site.


Dave, I don't know if what's on that page is 'the' answer, but it does
look like a good way to do brisket. Didn't see any obnoxious ads, nor
did I have to do anything other than click the link.

I'm thinkin' we might cut FatBoy some slack--QJoint looks like a legit
good site whose contents are on topic here.
(obviously only my opinion)


The objection I had was posting the 'you can find the answer here at this
website which is in desperate need for participants'. If he wants to put
the
website in his sig line, no big deal. But if he wants to answer a
question,
then I think he should just answer it on this NG.
--
Dave


FWIW, I find links irritating except for reference purposes. We have a
perfectly good binary forum in the form of ABF and of course the variety
of specialized food forums which are all encouraged to use ABF for their
media display. A few folks do an outstanding job of sharing pertinent
content on ABF, often including a link to additional media relating to
the same subject.

Too many recent posters have blatently enticed members of this forum
to participate in other sites serving the same or similar purpose. Some
posts included absolutely nothing of value to this group while offering
unimaginable delights elsewhere.

--
Brick(Who doesn't need billboards to figure out what to buy)
  #14 (permalink)  
Old 27-02-2008, 09:16 PM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Default User
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,545
Default Temperature of Brisket

Dave Bugg wrote:

Bill wrote:


Spamming is the only way the googlegoobers know. BTW, no need
to help them with his spamming. please snip the payload.


Or I can just kill-file you. Bye.


Hmm. I actually agree with Bill. If someone is spamming, why quote the
spam links?




Brian

--
If televison's a babysitter, the Internet is a drunk librarian who
won't shut up.
-- Dorothy Gambrell (http://catandgirl.com)
  #15 (permalink)  
Old 27-02-2008, 10:01 PM posted to alt.food.barbecue
Dave Bugg
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,620
Default Temperature of Brisket

Default User wrote:
Dave Bugg wrote:

Bill wrote:


Spamming is the only way the googlegoobers know. BTW, no need
to help them with his spamming. please snip the payload.


Or I can just kill-file you. Bye.


Hmm. I actually agree with Bill. If someone is spamming, why quote the
spam links?


Didn't much pay attention.


 




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