Jonas-Switzerland
TVWBB Super Fan
I think when you so something three years in a row, it becomes a tradition. On this year's neighborhood get-together I again cooked a swiss brisket. i'll call it a tradition next year.
This was before the trim. Not sure if these fat layers are "correct" in the proper cut. The sort-of-point muscle is to the left:

Cooked on the WSM. Had a much better time holding temperatures. I had to be mindful of the heat-up period, and reducing airflow soon. Once it holds its temps, it holds its temps. It was out in some slightly breezy weather. But rock steady.

Before the wrap. You see part of my weird trim here. It looks like I gouged out some of the meat. But it was a whole layer of fat. If I left it on, I'd be worried about getting enough seasoning on the meat. If I removed it, then I'd remove 20% of the meat because the fat layer passes through the sort-of flat.
And serving, after a 24h hold.

Aaaand, flat was still dry. But a lot better. I cooked the flat slightly above 195. To like 199- 201. It was still tough to probe before the rest. That's why I overcooked my other brisket before. It felt tough, nowhere near room temperature butter. So I took it higher and dried it out. This time I stopped earlier and prayed to the BBQ gods for some 24h long hold magic. And compared to how tough it was before the hold, they truly did some magic.
Next time, I'll cook the brisket flat closer to 195 and pray for the long hold again.
This was before the trim. Not sure if these fat layers are "correct" in the proper cut. The sort-of-point muscle is to the left:

Cooked on the WSM. Had a much better time holding temperatures. I had to be mindful of the heat-up period, and reducing airflow soon. Once it holds its temps, it holds its temps. It was out in some slightly breezy weather. But rock steady.

Before the wrap. You see part of my weird trim here. It looks like I gouged out some of the meat. But it was a whole layer of fat. If I left it on, I'd be worried about getting enough seasoning on the meat. If I removed it, then I'd remove 20% of the meat because the fat layer passes through the sort-of flat.
And serving, after a 24h hold.

Aaaand, flat was still dry. But a lot better. I cooked the flat slightly above 195. To like 199- 201. It was still tough to probe before the rest. That's why I overcooked my other brisket before. It felt tough, nowhere near room temperature butter. So I took it higher and dried it out. This time I stopped earlier and prayed to the BBQ gods for some 24h long hold magic. And compared to how tough it was before the hold, they truly did some magic.
Next time, I'll cook the brisket flat closer to 195 and pray for the long hold again.