I have my second brisket, a 6.3-pound FLAT that I’ll be cooking in a day or two. I’m thinking of doing it as per the Smoked, Foiled, & WSM- (or Oven-) Finished method as described in the cooking section.
The first flat I made was a little on the dry side, due in part to a thermometer being off so my pit temps were probably considerably below my target temp of 225°F.
Also, I’d Worcestershired and rubbed the flat the night before cooking and was a little surprised at how much liquid came out of the meat overnight, possibly another reason for the meat being a little dry. Next time I’ll put the rub on shortly before putting the meat on the WSM.
I foiled the meat after it had plateau’d at 155°F for one hour and put it back on the (what I thought was) 225°F WSM.
I pulled the flat off when an instant-read thermometer read 181°F in some places, 195°F in others, foiled it, and let it rest in a 150°F oven for 1 hour. It sliced nice enough, but as I said, it was a little dry.
The method in Chris’s site’s cooking section calls for foiling the 10-12-pound packer cut when the meat reaches 165°F, increasing the WSM temp to 300°F, and finishing to a meat temp of 205°F. Since I’m using a 6.3-pound flat instead of a whole packer cut, should I make any adjustments to the internal temperatures for foiling and finishing the meat?
Would it be better to leave my WSM at 225 or will the 300°F finishing temperature make for a moister final product? Time won’t be an issue for this cook.
Also, I’m looking for nice moist, tender slices but not pull-apart consistency. Considering that the meat is foiled, should I be pulling the meat off at, say, 180, 185, or 200°F rather than at 205°F?
Rita
The first flat I made was a little on the dry side, due in part to a thermometer being off so my pit temps were probably considerably below my target temp of 225°F.
Also, I’d Worcestershired and rubbed the flat the night before cooking and was a little surprised at how much liquid came out of the meat overnight, possibly another reason for the meat being a little dry. Next time I’ll put the rub on shortly before putting the meat on the WSM.
I foiled the meat after it had plateau’d at 155°F for one hour and put it back on the (what I thought was) 225°F WSM.
I pulled the flat off when an instant-read thermometer read 181°F in some places, 195°F in others, foiled it, and let it rest in a 150°F oven for 1 hour. It sliced nice enough, but as I said, it was a little dry.
The method in Chris’s site’s cooking section calls for foiling the 10-12-pound packer cut when the meat reaches 165°F, increasing the WSM temp to 300°F, and finishing to a meat temp of 205°F. Since I’m using a 6.3-pound flat instead of a whole packer cut, should I make any adjustments to the internal temperatures for foiling and finishing the meat?
Would it be better to leave my WSM at 225 or will the 300°F finishing temperature make for a moister final product? Time won’t be an issue for this cook.
Also, I’m looking for nice moist, tender slices but not pull-apart consistency. Considering that the meat is foiled, should I be pulling the meat off at, say, 180, 185, or 200°F rather than at 205°F?

Rita