Mordechai F
TVWBB Member
My wife has a boiled brisket recipe she makes that has outstanding flavors, and I'd love to adapt it and figure out how to smoke it on the WSM.
The recipe calls for boiling the meat (the horror!) for about 2.5 hours in water, along with onion, garlic, and 10 whole cloves. You then make the following sauce:
10 oz apple butter
1/2 cup dry white wine
2T minced scallions
3T prepared mustard
1.5t kosher salt
.75t curry powder
.5t black pepper
Sauce goes on the meat, meat in oven at 325 for another 30 minutes, you can baste a couple of extra times while roasting.
I find the combination of the fruity sweetness of the apple butter coupled with the tang of the scallions and spice of the cloves to be an awesome combo. Problem is the meat is inevitably either somewhat dry or tough, or both.
Since I started doing high-heat brisket cooks on the WSM (thanks to the amazing crew on this board) I've had my eyes opened as to how I can get brisket that's moist and tender almost every time. I want to adapt the above recipe to a high-heat cook, and I have a small 4lb flat piece that I can experiment on tomorrow. (I usually do packers, but one time my wife needed a small piece of brisket for a dish so I bought a full packer and cut and trimmed my own meat. It was a great way to really learn the contours of a packer. I separated the point from the flat, and then cut the flat in half.) I'm thinking I do a regular high heat cook, but add a foil packet of cloves to the cooker along with my smoke wood. I'll cook for around two hours at 325/350, then foil the meat for another hour. I'm thinking I'll then transfer the meat to another foil pan (retaining the juices on the side obviously), coat with the apple butter sauce, and cook exposed in the WSM until tender. That's the draft gameplan, but I'm worried about drying the meat out as well as about the high sugar content of the apple butter burning. I also have no idea as to if I should use a rub or not. Any and all ideas and guidance would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
The recipe calls for boiling the meat (the horror!) for about 2.5 hours in water, along with onion, garlic, and 10 whole cloves. You then make the following sauce:
10 oz apple butter
1/2 cup dry white wine
2T minced scallions
3T prepared mustard
1.5t kosher salt
.75t curry powder
.5t black pepper
Sauce goes on the meat, meat in oven at 325 for another 30 minutes, you can baste a couple of extra times while roasting.
I find the combination of the fruity sweetness of the apple butter coupled with the tang of the scallions and spice of the cloves to be an awesome combo. Problem is the meat is inevitably either somewhat dry or tough, or both.
Since I started doing high-heat brisket cooks on the WSM (thanks to the amazing crew on this board) I've had my eyes opened as to how I can get brisket that's moist and tender almost every time. I want to adapt the above recipe to a high-heat cook, and I have a small 4lb flat piece that I can experiment on tomorrow. (I usually do packers, but one time my wife needed a small piece of brisket for a dish so I bought a full packer and cut and trimmed my own meat. It was a great way to really learn the contours of a packer. I separated the point from the flat, and then cut the flat in half.) I'm thinking I do a regular high heat cook, but add a foil packet of cloves to the cooker along with my smoke wood. I'll cook for around two hours at 325/350, then foil the meat for another hour. I'm thinking I'll then transfer the meat to another foil pan (retaining the juices on the side obviously), coat with the apple butter sauce, and cook exposed in the WSM until tender. That's the draft gameplan, but I'm worried about drying the meat out as well as about the high sugar content of the apple butter burning. I also have no idea as to if I should use a rub or not. Any and all ideas and guidance would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!