Mordechai F
TVWBB Member
Hoping that the experts can advise me on this one. For unfortunate reasons involving brisket selection (i.e. I wasn't there), I have a cryovaced packer that weighs in on the smaller side, only 9.84 lbs in total. The problem is not the weight, it's the dimensions - sucker is spread out a brisket pancake and gets really thin out on the whole side of the flat, well less than an inch in thickness. I was hoping to utilize the high-heat method championed by K. Kruger and others here on the board to cook with, but now I have no idea as how best to proceed. Do I still go high-heat and wait until 150-160 to foil? Do I foil earlier, say at 140? Do I try and cut the thinner area of the main body of the piece, and just throw it on top? (As advocated by Mr. Peach-Kissed, Steve Petrone?) Do I contemplate marinating the meat instead of using a rub? There's a Dr. Pepper marinade that I've seen posted here that intrigues me, and I just took delivery of a Food Saver via the online deal that was posted here around the holidays (thank you Keri C!) - will vacuum marinating help retain moisture? One other thing to note is that this brisket comes off a grass-fed cow, and either because of that, or because they got a little too eager with the knives at the processing plant, there's not that much of a fat cap to speak of.
To make things more complicated for myself, this will also to be my first time using lump instead of K. (Lazzari Mesquite Lump, since that's all I've been able to easily find so far here in Los Angeles. Will use lumps of almond with a chunk of hickory for smoke.) I'm trying to take those baby steps into abandoning the rigid attention to temps and probing for feel, and the combination of this new fuel with this lean, thin piece of meat is leaving me less than confident in my temp control skills.
Any and all insight is greatly appreciated...
To make things more complicated for myself, this will also to be my first time using lump instead of K. (Lazzari Mesquite Lump, since that's all I've been able to easily find so far here in Los Angeles. Will use lumps of almond with a chunk of hickory for smoke.) I'm trying to take those baby steps into abandoning the rigid attention to temps and probing for feel, and the combination of this new fuel with this lean, thin piece of meat is leaving me less than confident in my temp control skills.
Any and all insight is greatly appreciated...