I fired off the last of the two prime briskets last night Got the fire started.
Meat trimmed. A great deal of fat on these primes.
Rubbed with mustard, and my current spice blend, a mix of black pepper, chipotle powder, rubbed sage, coriander, garlic powder, thyme, a dash of cayenne, and a dash of chinese five spice all ground very fine in the spice grinder.
The life support to get thru the whole night.
The final result, on at 11, off at 2 the next day, rested for about 40 minutes. Average cook temp was 240 throughout. I cannot stand waiting for an eternity cooking on of these primes at 210 or 220. They take way too long.
Sliced and delicious. Still a lot of fat to carve out, but moist, tender and very tasty.
Still not sure I want to pay near $4 a pound for this meat. I don't compete, so I'd rather just find better quality packers than the no rolls that I find nearby.
Now after nearly 30 hours, I can finally go to sleep. I'm switching back to night shift for a while on Thursday, and have to get ready for that.
Meat trimmed. A great deal of fat on these primes.

Rubbed with mustard, and my current spice blend, a mix of black pepper, chipotle powder, rubbed sage, coriander, garlic powder, thyme, a dash of cayenne, and a dash of chinese five spice all ground very fine in the spice grinder.

The life support to get thru the whole night.

The final result, on at 11, off at 2 the next day, rested for about 40 minutes. Average cook temp was 240 throughout. I cannot stand waiting for an eternity cooking on of these primes at 210 or 220. They take way too long.

Sliced and delicious. Still a lot of fat to carve out, but moist, tender and very tasty.

Still not sure I want to pay near $4 a pound for this meat. I don't compete, so I'd rather just find better quality packers than the no rolls that I find nearby.
Now after nearly 30 hours, I can finally go to sleep. I'm switching back to night shift for a while on Thursday, and have to get ready for that.