How do I make brisket at home?

4,290 Views | 45 Replies | Last: 2 mo ago by kyledr04
NormanEH
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Eliminatus said:

Backyard Gator said:

Slicer97 said:

rhoswen said:

If I'm doing one for like, bbq baked potatoes, I use a roast in the crock pot with liquid smoke.

Does it taste like sadness and regret?

With bitter undertones of shame?

And acrid notes of malaise and despondency?

And a lingering finish of quiet desperation?
spud1910
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You can smoke a brisket in an electric smoker. Put it in, set time and temp, use a thermeter with an alarm that goes to your phone or has a remote, start probing with thermeter when it hits internal temp of 195F and pull when tender. Let rest at least a couple of hours wrapped in a cooler. Enjoy. You might not win a smokeoff, but will be way better than what you can get at Cornyn's house.
YaGuey09
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Ryan the Temp said:



This method changed my life. I've smoked some briskets on a $40 grill from Home Depot I would put up against a lot of restaurants. Trust the process and you can't go wrong.

ETA: I use a remote-read meat thermometer for each step of the process. I set an alarm for 170 degrees and go back to bed.

How long does it take for, say, a 10lb packer?
Gnome Sayin
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Max Power said:

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JoCoAg09
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infinity ag said:

Backyard Gator said:


Do you want to smoke the brisket low and slow?

You can do that on a grill, but it is going to take a particular setup and a lot of patience.

Or are you looking at doing it in the oven?


Slow is good. Is there something available which I can just turn on and come back after x hours? Something beginning friendly you can recommend? Maybe once I see what I can do, I can try how to do it the "real" way with more customizations.

For now, I am trying to get to the end product with least complications and lowest chance of messing up.

All, please post Amazon links if you have any recommendations for what I can buy.

I don't have any specific recommendations, but it sounds like a pellet grill would fit your needs. You can get a solid enough starter one (see PitBoss) for around $300.
AgResearch
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infinity ag said:

I love brisket.

Someone here gave me some good tips on burger grilling and those came out really well. So thank you!

How can I smoke a brisket in a relatively inexpensive setup at home? Basically I am looking to buy something off Amazon and use that. Electric also fine, not looking for the authentic making experience.


Weber charcoal grill. Charcoal snake + oak chunks.

Watch Youtube video from America's Test Kitchen.

Better than 95% of restaurants that specialize in smoked meat when you follow this method.

EDIT - See this was recommended earlier in the thread.
92Ag95
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infinity ag said:

Backyard Gator said:


Do you want to smoke the brisket low and slow?

You can do that on a grill, but it is going to take a particular setup and a lot of patience.

Or are you looking at doing it in the oven?


Slow is good. Is there something available which I can just turn on and come back after x hours? Something beginning friendly you can recommend? Maybe once I see what I can do, I can try how to do it the "real" way with more customizations.

For now, I am trying to get to the end product with least complications and lowest chance of messing up.

All, please post Amazon links if you have any recommendations for what I can buy.

That would be a pellet grill/smoker. Set temp.....motor controls auger speed feeding pellets to combustion pot. You don't get a lot of smoke with this setup so you'll need a smoke tube that you fill with either wood chips or pellets and position close enough to the combustion pot to produce the desired amount of smoke. Some people moisten these so they don't actually flash over and will just try to ignite producing smoke. Most modern pellet smokers like Recteq and Treager will connect to your phone so that you can monitor grill temp and meat temp (with the needed probes).
TX AG 88
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Maybe I didn't read close enough, but I didn't see where you specified "inside" or "outside". If you're in an apartment/condo and don't have an outdoor area, I can't really give any advice other than follow one of the oven-based recommendations given here.

An offset smoker is your most "authentic" option, but those are relatively expensive and most likely don't answer the mail in this case.

Some pellet grills might fall into your idea of inexpensive, and those are low-effort (i.e. they mind their own temps). IMO, you don't get good bark on a pellet grill. Several recommendations for pellet grills have been made in this tread.

If those are too expensive, you can get very comparable results (IMHO) for cheaper with an electric smoker such as https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07NQLF9WD/?aaxitk=2ca97771bffbada87153e2642c9c9976

A step up from pellets or wood chips like above is lump charcoal. You CAN get a very nice bark using lump charcoal. A Big Green Egg is the standard here, but that probably qualifies as expensive. There are decent off-brands that might fit your price point. BGE's and other kamado smokers are highly versatile, just scour the internet for myriads of recipes. One favorite feature of mine is that you can get a pizza stone, run the temp way up (450-550*) and make very good homemade pizzas!

A compromise solution (gain lower cost, lose pizza making ability) is a gravity fed lump charcoal smoker like https://www.amazon.com/Masterbuilt%C2%AE-Technology-GravityFedTM-Reversible-MB20041023/dp/B0CN3T6P1B These gravity fed smokers feature automatic temperature control like a pellet grill, but they make real smoke and will give you a Texas quality brisket! (again, IMHO)
Duffel Pud
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1) Shell out major bucks for some craft BBQ.
2) Light grill at home.
3) Set grill to lowest setting.
3) Just before guests arrive, place said BBQ on grill wrapped in aluminum foil.
4) Take off grill with guests watching.
5) Profit.
YaGuey09
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This weekend I followed the recipe/video from America's Test kitchen that was posted here a couple of times (snake method, weber 22", hickory chunks)

Oh Mylanta

It was the best brisket I've ever made...hands down. My father-in-law, whose family routinely enters into brisket cook-offs through the year, told me that he would put it up against his brother's brisket in a heart-beat.

Talk about a compliment!!!!
kyledr04
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