Doing my second smoke this weekend and my first smoke for a lot of people. The first smoke went really well, I learned a little and found that I really knew a lot from reading this forum. I think my knowledge from this forum will do me well tonight, but I want to bounce this off you all to see if there are some new words of wisdom.
I bought a 17lbs brisket, but trimmed off a piece of the flat for stew (1.5-2lbs). Between that and the fat trimming, I'm guessing I'm around 12-13lbs. I will get a scale this afternoon to confirm. I bought a cryovac with two butts, total pre-trimmed weight was 17lbs. So, after trimming, probably 6.5 lbs each (I should've bought a scale yesterday).
So, the brisket should be 13-20 hours. The butts should be 10-15 hours. Based on cooking charts on this site. I want to serve about 15:00 (or no later than 17:00) tomorrow. Last weekend, I pulled my first brisket and it sat for over two hours and stayed at 160F. Based on this, and providing time for a 'just in case', I was thinking of throwing in the brisket around 23:00 tonight, which would put her at about 12:00-16:00 tomorrow (last brisket took barely over 1hrs/lb). I can hold it for a few hours if it's done quick, or wait to pull if it takes too long. Then I was thinking I'll add the butts around 2:00AM tomorrow morning - moving the brisket to the bottom rack. This should mean they both finish together, based on weight and estimated time per lbs.
But, I've been reading the forums (back a few years, even). There is a ton of information on Butts over Brisket. A lot of people seem to say butts take 16, 18 or even 20 hours. And they seem to be describing 6-7lbs butts. In that case, I would want to start butts even earlier and add my brisket around 12:00 tonight to finish together.
My bigger concern, of course, is meat not finishing in time. BUT, I am not sure I can keep meat hot enough for say, four hours, if it's all done at noon tomorrow. Any tips on cook times or additional tips for holding meat would be appreciated. Last weekend I set my cooler in the sun to warm it up (this works in Florida), put newspaper in the bottom, wrapped brisket in two layers of foil and a towel then put the cooler inside in sunlight coming through the window. It dropped from 190 to 160 during those two
hours - I would think 140 would creep up quick after that.
Sorry so long winded, I'm nervous cooking for 30ppl!!
-Ian
I bought a 17lbs brisket, but trimmed off a piece of the flat for stew (1.5-2lbs). Between that and the fat trimming, I'm guessing I'm around 12-13lbs. I will get a scale this afternoon to confirm. I bought a cryovac with two butts, total pre-trimmed weight was 17lbs. So, after trimming, probably 6.5 lbs each (I should've bought a scale yesterday).
So, the brisket should be 13-20 hours. The butts should be 10-15 hours. Based on cooking charts on this site. I want to serve about 15:00 (or no later than 17:00) tomorrow. Last weekend, I pulled my first brisket and it sat for over two hours and stayed at 160F. Based on this, and providing time for a 'just in case', I was thinking of throwing in the brisket around 23:00 tonight, which would put her at about 12:00-16:00 tomorrow (last brisket took barely over 1hrs/lb). I can hold it for a few hours if it's done quick, or wait to pull if it takes too long. Then I was thinking I'll add the butts around 2:00AM tomorrow morning - moving the brisket to the bottom rack. This should mean they both finish together, based on weight and estimated time per lbs.
But, I've been reading the forums (back a few years, even). There is a ton of information on Butts over Brisket. A lot of people seem to say butts take 16, 18 or even 20 hours. And they seem to be describing 6-7lbs butts. In that case, I would want to start butts even earlier and add my brisket around 12:00 tonight to finish together.
My bigger concern, of course, is meat not finishing in time. BUT, I am not sure I can keep meat hot enough for say, four hours, if it's all done at noon tomorrow. Any tips on cook times or additional tips for holding meat would be appreciated. Last weekend I set my cooler in the sun to warm it up (this works in Florida), put newspaper in the bottom, wrapped brisket in two layers of foil and a towel then put the cooler inside in sunlight coming through the window. It dropped from 190 to 160 during those two
hours - I would think 140 would creep up quick after that.
Sorry so long winded, I'm nervous cooking for 30ppl!!

-Ian