“Stick around. “Don’t go anywhere. “ I could not go away. From the first click, it was captivating and I was hooked. This is one of the best videos I have seen in a very long time. The brisket looked absolutely delicious. This channel is subscribe worthy.
@@bbqsouthernstyle~ I hear you there, all my siblings past on n their children n grandchildren don't bother to remember me... I have no grandchildren so now I'm alone... at 80 yrs old I still do some cooking but to make a brisket is way beyond my capability now... however I really enjoyed watching n it sure looks yummy, wish I could join you 😂🍺🍽🍻😅
Ive watched many of your videos... and let me tell you... YOU MASTERED THIS ONE!!! My dad was a chef, here in Texas... which is where i learned my craft... he taught me all about smoking brisket, from starting my fire, seasoing the brisket and NEVER TRIM THAT THING!!!! We let that bad boy render down every piece of fat that it contains... he would say, "That's where your flavor comes from and the fat naturally tenderizes your meat." I ABSOLUTELY LOVE YOUR VIDEOS!!!❤
Thank you so much, yea just let the fat do the work and your good to go. Old school style. Thank you for watching and love you spending time with us more on the way,
I am a 58-year-old retired sailor from Detroit; I learned two things from my fellow sailors from Texas in the '90s; Juneteenth and Brisket. Fast forward 15 years, I moved back to Detroit after my kids had all gotten married and left the nest. I made a brisket for a family BBQ the first month home. My family lost their minds. They were in heaven. Now, we can't have a family event without brisket. My mom is still around and demands that a brisket be brought to accompany the Christmas dinner. Watching your video reminded me of that first brisket I made when I returned home. Since I first saw your video, it inspired me to teach my brothers, nephews, and friends how to smoke brisket. You, sir, are an inspiration. Because of you, at least a dozen more men in Detroit are smoking briskets and other meats for their family and friends. We exchange recipes and share samples regularly. Again, thanks for a great video I have watched and shared multiple times, BTW, Lard?! Shut the front door! Fantastic idea. It made perfectly good sense, even more so with your explanation. Keep up the great work. And yes, I made a whole lotta bad brisket before I got to the good stuff. The fat is where it's at!
Brother, I am new to your channel. I am so glad I found you. Your brisket got over a million views which is much deserved, and you are one in a million when it comes to southern cooking. I hope you are passing this tradition down to other family members because these techniques that you are using are priceless.
My daughter moved to Austin 11 years ago. After pilgrimaging to all the top bbqs in the area, this method contradicts everything I thought was gospel about brisket. I learned something new, Thank-you!
I lived for 23 years in Central Texas. Low and slow is definitely the gospel I learned. This is freaking me out. Sticking around for the end results...
Great video! I am from Texas and I do all my briskets on a stick burner with a side box burning oak wood. Takes 10-15 hours depending on the size of the brisket. I love to learn new BBQ traditions, thank you for sharing! I have been to Snow's and they are AWESOME.
You cook a brisket unlike anybody else on RUclips, and you cook it the same way you're supposed to slice it...across the grain. I'm saving this vid for when I cook a brisket on my Pit Barrel PBX. I appreciate your old school approach. The influence of competition bbq cam be seen in most vids. I appreciate your common sense approach, because all I want to do is see smiling faces when I feed my family and friends.
Dude, I'm not lying when I tell you, I wanted to bite my computer screen when you was cutting into that magnificent brisket! Oh, that looked soooo good!!! Great job, my friend!!
Hats off to you sir. Old school all the way, gotta love it. I grew up out in West Texas in the early 1950s. My family went to a lot of big barbeques. I always hung around the old pit cooks. I would load mesquite wood in a burn barrel, then scoop the coals out of the bottom and carry it to the pits. The pit boss would point to where he wanted the coals. I watched and fetched beers for the cooks. It was a great time for me. My grand daddy was proud of my working in the pits helping out. At the time, Grand Prize beer was popular back then. My initial were GPB. Everybody called me Grand Prize! Or GP for short. I remember the men talking about the meats, basting the cuts with a small mop. The big kettle of pinto beans over the fire. Loved listening to you and watching you do your thing. Also loved that new pit, the air flow looks killer. Looking real good there my friend. God bless you and your family.
You, Sir, are not only a phenomenal cook, but your ability to impart your knowledge is absolutely incredible! By the way, your radio voice is so easy to listen to. Thanks for making this video.
Still sticking around not going anywhere just been really busy with work. Just so you know I built me drum cooker and still use the exact same recipe and instructions for your brisket. My family LOVES it.
You said you were using a cheaper cut of meat, Well growing up in a poor working class family we never saw "A" grade meats but our mothers masterfully turned those cheaper cuts into the most mouthwatering delicious meals imaginable, it is the skill of the cook that creates the magic, thank you for sharing this recipe.
That's funny because my Stepson, who turns out some pretty good Que, is a Traeger disciple. He does the 3-2-1 method, uses leaky peach paper in the last hour, then wraps it in a beach towel and puts it in a cooler for another hour and a half. Don't quote me, but his brisket is nowhere near what I would call "juicy." I told him about this video & he gave me this funny look 😂. This brisket is obviously so juicy, you could wring it out!
Really loved to see someone do a direct heat brisket and to hear the history behind. Also loved how he took a Walmart cut and did more with it than 99% of YT “brisket experts” who all use $15/lb ++ cuts. Looked great, and didnt take him all day to do it. Learned a lot here, great stuff!
My Grandmother's Dad was a cowboy. He joined the herds at San Antonio for the drive North..Every year before Juneteenth, the Black community leaders would come to his house and give. him the money for him to buy a beef for them to barbecue. They would dig a pit and burn wood a long time to get a pit of coals. They would cut the beef half in two lengthwise and cook it like that. I wish I remembered the times for everything.
Oh, by the way, I like your style and pretty much agree with everything you say and do. But age and wheelchair have me using a ***gasp***electric smoker.I cook in pans now so no greasy clean up. I looked long time before I found a cooker that suited me. But with a little TLC I ccman still get a preetty descent piece of meat. My sfamily has run out until I am the llast one. My brother joined his wife's family so throughly that his kids don't know our family name .Now I am getting rid of family heirlooms. Folks, don't don't wait tilll you are past 80 to settle up. I tried to clean up the typos by editing but failed miserably.
Holly crap! This is REAL BBQ, the way man was supossed to cook meat and that's one good looking piece of meat. My wife was watching the video with me and when you sliced the brisket she was impressed and said "I want some!!". Thanks for this great video. Edit: Forgot to mention that your prsentation was great, clear and concise instructions with no added bull.
Most impressive video - though longer, there is no lack of information and worth every minute. Description and instruction, methodical, clear, well paced. No irritating music. The voice is amazing btw! Nice job. Carl
Sir, this is the most beautiful thing to date that I’ve ever seen in the world of barbecue. I am on the carnivore diet and this looks exquisite. Thank you for this video and I subscribed.
I just confirmed my idea that a beef cut like this does not need a fancy rub. Salt and pepper is all it needs to accentuate the flavor of the beef. So, meat + fat + salt + pepper + six hours in cooker + two hours in oven ( did you say at what temperature?) and that’s it. Personally, I never trim the fat, that’s where the flavor is. Excellent vídeo. Thank you.
This man has secret BBQ knowledge handed down through lineage of generations. Nothing fancy, amazing results. I swallowed a good pint of my own saliva watching the last parts of this video. I could smell and taste that brisket.
That brisket was cooked to perfection. I don't like any pink in my beef and it had none and was not dry but so juicy and tender. I have just become a subscriber because of this. Thank you, sir.
I've never seen anything like this. I've cooked over seventy briskets so far and screwed up a lot in the beginning. My go to now basically is to trim, wrap in a foil boat (to preserve the bark). then rest for fifteen hours. I've got to try this now-great video.
I've got a pit barrel and you can control it with foil around the holes, but it's not easy. I've never seen a brisket on a barrel smoker and I'm impressed.
I’m a 13 year vegetarian who used to eat a lot of meat, who doesn’t care if other people eat meat, who appreciates cooking and those that cook, and who will probably never cook anything here. I subscribed. You are smart, well spoken, and your audible voice is spectacular. You could be an announcer or radio voice. Keep it up.
Thank you Kindly, very much appreciate the great comment and glad to have you with us. Funny I just put out a Chickpea salad video. Check it out I think you will like it.
FYI- You can avoid using the bars to restrict air flow… you can use flexible refrigerator magnets to (example is magnetic calendars) or a large round magnet for each hole. I have a drum smoker and it works perfectly
I made one mistake. I should eaten before I watched this. You left my mouth watering. The only thing missing was the aroma from the meat cooking. I can only imagine how good that tasted. Thanks for sharing your wisdom.
Man!, I've just eaten a decent sized meal and that brisket is still making my mouth water, looks amazing! Love the old school simplicity of the prep, sometimes doing something in a straightforward way, just concentrating on a few crucial details is better than trying to do all sorts of fancy stuff, gets the best results.
Ol' Skool! Never have understood why people try to to fix what's not broke... It's not how much you make, it's how much you save! May God Bless You and Yours!
I have to tell you Sir. This is one great video. It brings back memories of my brother who used to BBQ. But nothing to this size. He had big barrel cookers 55 gallon. Kinda like your new one. I bet your neighbors are starving when your cooking. You are definitely talented and really appreciate you sharing your incredible knowledge and experience.
This recipe looks amazing ,and it worked out perfectly ,because that’s the exact smoker I wanted to purchase, I thought it was pretty easy to use and a no-brainer ,and now I know it works. Perfect thanks for all the info. And also, I learned a lot ,I knew nothing of cooking a brisket ,and now I feel like I can executed very well with all the stuff you showed us. Keep up the good work and thanks for sharing.
I’m a 74 YO carnivore for a couple of years. I feel 20 years younger. This video had me drooling. I live mostly on steak and ground beef with an occasional pork ribs and fish. I would consider that brisket to be a feast fit for a carnivore!
I appreciate that! thank we are all just trying to make nice food at the end of the day lol why hate on our fellow brothers and sisters. Thank you for watching and the great feedback my friend a safe and Happy 2024 to you!
Awww thank you, I think the best part of putting out content are the comments from the hearts of people like you. Thank you so much and I am so glad I can relax you and bring a bit of peace to your day. Thank you for watching.
Dude. This was EPIC. I have no idea how my Mom did this in the oven. I fall every time. Yours looks just like hers. she would Smoke on the cooker, 10 or so hours, then in the house in the oven. No one was allowed in there. Melt in your mouth no knife needed, use your hands, juice running down your arm. And if there was any left over, even cold out the fridge...Man how many times I got yelled at for picking at it right from the plate in the fridge. LOL Thanks man. Oh by the way, a good friend of mine who lives down in Australia but from the mid West of the USA and was ship mates with none other than Big Moe Cason the BBQ guru. loves your content. He is working on something for you and your channel. I will email you the work in progress. LOL Stay tuned, Don't go anywhere. 👍✌
I smoked another 20lb brisket using my Pit Barrel smoker and your technique and again it came out awesome. I slightly trim it though, it had a lot of fat on the point. I gave 5lbs to my daughter that has a catering business, she made brisket mac 'n cheese that sold out in one hour!
Thank you for the ole school way of doing brisket,I learn this from my grand dad who also did pigs,goats,deer over coals& wood ..digging a pit in the ground,for Christmas, 4th of July Celebrations this is the only way to get that good old southern flavor I am use to..keeping this tradition alive is important..thanks for sharing..from one Ole Alabama mom..keep sharing😊
Tallow is used to help tenderize the meat after the bark has been developed. Some people use tallow improperly by spreading it on the butcher paper or not using enough for it to confit, that’s why they’re unsuccessful or don’t understand the purpose of tallow. I prefer using some of the brisket trimmings to make my tallow instead of buying it. And I never trim off too much fat from the flat side because it’s already leaner and smaller than the point. I also prefer an offset over a drum when it comes to cooking brisket because you get to keep the flat side away from the fire more than you can with a drum cooker and it’s easier to add more wood/ flavor throughout your cook. Hardly ever do I spritz unless it’s necessary. I think adding a liquid to a brisket before the bark sets will delay the formation of bark on a brisket. Some briskets I see don’t even have a proper bark.
From the moment he started talking, I knew this was a video I didn't want to miss. Thank you! I learned a LOT today... :) And that brisket at the end... Whoeee! That's the real deal....
this brother here.. yo i've smoke plenty.. mainly on a Smokey mountain and i stress my self out every time.. you simplistic cook man is the way to go!!!
In the 80s I stopped at an old shack on side of road with smoke drifting toward road. I bought a sandwich with 2 inches of stacked sliced beef. I've dreamed of finding bbq like that again. I've found it my friend. Thank you
So I've cooked brisket several times using this technique and it works perfectly. I really like the mop sauce and it does help keep the fire under control. I cook to feel and my briskets usually take an hour longer, but there are many factors that could go into the longer cook. In my opinion the flavor over fire is about as good as it gets. Thank you for the lesson!
Oh my goodness!! I feel like such a slacker after watching this man with his skills on smoker/grill/BBQ! I am that guy he referred to that try’s 1 time and says never again on a brisket and tonight I today I tried to smoke a pork butt on my new Traeger and man it did not turn out. I know why, need to watch more of this channel and try again! Excellent EXCELLENT video! I am subscribed, THANK YOU!! Ps…..dude I dig your style 😎🤩🙌
I followed your instruction and I can honestly say best brisket I've ever made and in like 6.5 hrs thank you soooooo much. Will definitely do this again next time and every time going forward.
Thanks for giving me the confidence needed to try a brisket. I've been procrastinating for some time. However, your thorough instructions and simple method is precisely what many people are looking for in cooking vids. Keep up the great work! I look forward to watching you become a legend.
I've had a 55gal UDS years ago and did work out very nice for me. I had similar holes on top (where you put the rods), but I used regular machine bolts to plug the holes to help adjust the temperature. That might be cooler for you by not having to remove the rods when you need to turn the meat.
I have a Pit Barrel and that's a great suggestion. Should have thought of it myself. I'll just make sure to use bolts the same size as the rebar for air circulation.
Thank you sir for a well informed, intelligent and entertaining display of properly cooking a brisket. I will definitely follow these instructions when cooking my next one. Very good video!
This is how central Texas Germans cook their brisket except they use garlic powder instead of onion powder. They cook over either post oak or live oak coals. Most of those old German families had a pit behind the house made of local stone or brick with a grill about 18 inches or so from the floor and some kind of lid that gave about 12 inches above the grill. Ours is made for half a 55 gallon barrel to be the lid cut length wise. Great video
Absolutely great video. In the age of off set and pellet smokers. True art of cooking good meat was handed down from generations. Glad I was apart of hanging out with my Grandparents teaching me the way food should be made. Great video thanks for keeping the art alive. 🤙🏻🤙🏻🤙🏻
You have turned everything I know about brisket upside down, and I love it! I cannot wait to try your technique! I have an Old Smokey 22 inch barbecue pit, I’m hoping I can add an elevated rack which would give me 12 inches from the fire on the bottom to duplicate your barrel. Do you think I could make that work? PS , you have a really genuine and entertaining presentation style, they should give you a network TV show!
Thank you thank you! Yes, you should be good keeping that fire 12 or more inches away from the fire. keep the meat moist and you should be good. Also don't trim the meat. Thanks again and please let me know how your cook did. I will remember you Nick. Have a great evening my friend.
Thanks for your video tutorial. I appreciate the simplicity of the rub and method. I also appreciated the wisdom of your answers in the Q&A. Well done sir!
I too love the art of cooking and I have done my share. At 71 now, I don't have many to cook for as in the past. But my love for smoking is the open pit. Just enjoy sitting around after the meat is on, keep check on temps and adding wood when you need it. And the smell of my favorite wood, hickory. I know in Texas you have a lot of post oak. Here in SC, hickory is more abundant. Enjoyed your video
This is my first BBQ video! You are fabulous! Great voice and great teacher. Have wanted a smoker but can’t afford those fancy things. As a woman who loves to cook ( even in late 70s😂) . All I can say is yum😋. Looking into buying one ( cooker that is) Have a smaller brisket in the freezr( that’s how I found you today😂 Wanted to know how to cook it!). So glad I did!
I've cooked brisket with direct heat and they turned out great and I have cooked on indirect heat but mostly direct heat is a better cook to me good you explained it the way you did
Thank you for introducing me to old school southern style brisket. You've forever changed the way I'll look at cooking brisket, or any type of meat for that matter. I'll take many learnings from this and apply them to my own cooking ventures. Thanks again, my BBQ repertoire is substantially bolstered having found your channel.
This is my first time seeing this chef. I'm so happy I stumbled, accused his show. The meat looks soooooo good. I'm going to try this. I know it won't be as good as his, I "m going to try it anyway . I also want to say. I just love, love this man's voice.
Your cooking skills are excellent! I love watching you cook. My only regret is that I can’t taste the end result! 😩. Keep your episodes coming! A fan in Baltimore, Maryland. TY✋🏽✋🏽
Sir, you are an excellent pitmaster💯I followed your instructions on preparing my brisket flat. Using a 14inch Weber Smoker. That meat was so tender! my husband enjoyed it. I will be cooking the top part for the 4th of July, while my husband will be grilling on our horizontal charcoal barrel. Thank you 🙏🏾
Thanks for the awesome video. I just bought a half brisket, gonna try smoking it today. I have always been nervous about smoking a brisket. But you explain it really well and I have confidence that I can at least try. Plus it's only a half so it's good practice. 🙏
For a 45 min video, the longest part I couldn't wait for was the cut reveal. You cut the brisket in half and left us hanging...with putting the wrapper away and the temp of the brisket, you had just wait a whole 30 secs before seeing the inside of the brisket. I was too anxious to see it and it did not disappoint. The outside was perfect and the inside was surprisingly moist for a choice grade brisket and smoked directly for only 6 hours.
I’ve done this method twice. About the only complaint I have about this method is that it leaves a ton of the rendered fat at the bottom of the cooker. It’s literally a puddle. Which can be quite a pain to remove afterwards. Basically I wait until the coals have ashed out, remove the basket & ash pan, then scrape out the cooled solidified fat the next day with a large metal spoon then wipe the residual fats out with paper towels. I made the mistake of not doing that the first time & found myself fighting fat fires the next cook. But it’s really hard to argue with the flavor, speed & overall results achieved cooking a brisket directly over coals. Just wish cleanup was as easy as the cook!
At Independence Park in Gonzales, Texas there is a section with rows of old school brick BBQ pits, trailer loads of oak. I built my third UDS last year and use a semi direct method. I place a 20” pizza pan between the grate and the heat source. Fat renders without flair ups, almost a convection style flow of heat. No fat trim, except the silver skin. Salt, Equal portions of Salt, Pepper and Garlic is the rub I make. Always a hit at church and family gatherings. Enjoyed your video, I enjoy learning from others.
Well done! Well done tutorial. Clear, concise, to the point and charmingly delivered. Beautiful voice! You should be in radio! Or better yet, keep that apron on and continue to give these great cooking demonstrations!
Hi from Australia. Great presentation and instructions! My mouth was watering. I'm a single70yo female. Living alone, no cooker, so I'm not likely to be cooking this, but gee, id love to taste it. You have a beautiful voice and this video was a sheer pleasure to watch! ❤
This was really a great video. When I saw it was 44 minutes long, I thought I can't spend that long watching a brisket smoke. But each time I was thinking of stopping it, a voice in my head said: "Don't Go Anywhere". 😀😀😀😀😀😀. In truth, I wanted to see the end result and it looked spectacular. Definitely gonna try this myself. Thank you for taking the time to share your expertise!
Wow, how refreshing to see somebody cook a beautiful piece of meat and not overcook it. Thanks again I've been cooking beef for 40 years it's nice to see that other people out there are kind of appreciate it and cook it properly. Good job I'll be watching for more from you
Excellent video. Very informative. When I seperate the point from the flat I actually remove the point section from the flat section by cutting it off through the deckle.
I just LOVE your commercial voice! I'm sticking around not going anywhere. Thank meat looked so good when you flipped it over. Definitely juicy. I have a question. Have you cooked brisket in the oven and if so, can you do a video? Thanks for the GREAT video, you made me hungry when you cut through the fatty part.
This^ is what I've been looking for. I subbed. I'm going to give this a try for sure! Thank you for sharing your family's recipe. It's a lot more natural, and simple compared to most recipes I've seen xoxox
This is what it’s about. I’m so tired of hearing everyone trying to create the “perfect brisket” by adding wagyu tallow and paying $29.99 a lb for something that was never intended to be that. Well done on the cook and staying true to what brisket is for.
Ill say this, your logic is definitely sound even if flawed in some aspects lol. The oil on the steak demonstration was hilarious. You can have good logic and end up at the wrong location btw. Trimming fat for offset cooking is ideal as you say it wont render. leaving more fat externally does nothing for internal moisture as that comes from the intramuscular marbling,you cook that out and all the fat in the world outside wont save it. You are right, tallow does nothing for moisture in the sense people believe. People mainly use tallow to soften the bark and prevent it from drying out while its being held in a warmer or oven until ready to serve. I make my own tallow with the trimmings. Finally, yes it does look visibly pleasing on the board as we eat with our eyes. Love your channel and your pit collection. Would love to see a behind the scenes of that offset build.
I can't recall the last time that watching a cooking video made my mouth water right after eating supper! Brother, that brisket's got to be one of the most delectable-looking objects I've seen on RUclips in a long time-Yow! (It occurred to me that orange halves on the brisket would give it a slightly Chinese taste. M-m-m...)
being from chicago with family roots in the delta, spare ribs & tips are what i grew up on and can que them blindfolded with one hand tied behind my back. but i've been eyeing doing my own brisket and am glad i stumbled upon this video, as it makes sense from my perspective as spare ribs, as opposed to baby backs, have more fat that gives you not just flavor, but a "cushion" that keeps your ribs moist without doing backflips. this is the second video i've watched on untrimmed brisket and, as a novice, i think i've found the way to go...the only competition i'm in is how it tastes!!!
Agreed, I have smoked briskets and turkeys multiple way. Removing the original fat, just to add a different type of fat later seems to be unnecessary. And don’t get me started on the “injecting debate”. Enhancing flavor with seasoning is one thing, changing the entire flavor of the meat is another.
New Subscriber here. Quickest 45 minute video on You Tube. I always learn/steal the knowledge from experts. Now I can simply forget the rest and next brisket will be your technique. One tip besides not trimming is to keep the brisket 12" above the fire. I think that is the game changer. Thanks for sharing your information.
Dang that offset smoker you got is a beast. My oklahoma joes is about worn out after 10 years of BBQ. I'll end up getting a drum because of the efficiency.
Great video as always - have used this technique numerous times on my direct heat hill country cooker - both briskets and shoulder clods - meat about 24 inches above the coals - comes out perfect every time - thanks for sharing - Ted
Mesmerising! What we call barbecue in Australia is grilling in the US. I am now determined to try this I could smell and taste it from here!!! Also such a beautiful voice it was a pleasure to listen to.
“Stick around. “Don’t go anywhere. “ I could not go away. From the first click, it was captivating and I was hooked. This is one of the best videos I have seen in a very long time. The brisket looked absolutely delicious. This channel is subscribe worthy.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you and thank you for the great shout out.
I had the same problem, I could not stop the video to go to sleep. I had to finish watching it.
I read this as he was saying it
Man...when you said "we don't have the family we used to," I felt that in my soul. Good video my friend!
Truth! lol thank you back in the day we had cars surrounding the house on every side.
💯💯💯
@@bbqsouthernstyle~ I hear you there, all my siblings past on n their children n grandchildren don't bother to remember me... I have no grandchildren so now I'm alone... at 80 yrs old I still do some cooking but to make a brisket is way beyond my capability now... however I really enjoyed watching n it sure looks yummy, wish I could join you 😂🍺🍽🍻😅
@@OliverSimon-yr2nyI am in a similar situation. I've made friends with a young family and the husband wants to learn BBQ, so I'm teaching him
Me too 😢
Ive watched many of your videos... and let me tell you... YOU MASTERED THIS ONE!!! My dad was a chef, here in Texas... which is where i learned my craft... he taught me all about smoking brisket, from starting my fire, seasoing the brisket and NEVER TRIM THAT THING!!!! We let that bad boy render down every piece of fat that it contains... he would say, "That's where your flavor comes from and the fat naturally tenderizes your meat."
I ABSOLUTELY LOVE YOUR VIDEOS!!!❤
Thank you so much, yea just let the fat do the work and your good to go. Old school style. Thank you for watching and love you spending time with us more on the way,
I am a 58-year-old retired sailor from Detroit; I learned two things from my fellow sailors from Texas in the '90s; Juneteenth and Brisket. Fast forward 15 years, I moved back to Detroit after my kids had all gotten married and left the nest. I made a brisket for a family BBQ the first month home. My family lost their minds. They were in heaven. Now, we can't have a family event without brisket. My mom is still around and demands that a brisket be brought to accompany the Christmas dinner. Watching your video reminded me of that first brisket I made when I returned home. Since I first saw your video, it inspired me to teach my brothers, nephews, and friends how to smoke brisket. You, sir, are an inspiration. Because of you, at least a dozen more men in Detroit are smoking briskets and other meats for their family and friends. We exchange recipes and share samples regularly. Again, thanks for a great video I have watched and shared multiple times,
BTW, Lard?! Shut the front door! Fantastic idea. It made perfectly good sense, even more so with your explanation. Keep up the great work. And yes, I made a whole lotta bad brisket before I got to the good stuff. The fat is where it's at!
11am qqqqq😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊@@frivlus
GOOD VEDIO WITH GOOD INFORMATION
Not only are you a great cook, but also a great person for taking the time to show people the old school way of smoking a brisket.
Thank you! And it my pleasure to show good food to you guys. Thank you for sharing and watching.
Am seriously impressed. Thank you for taking the time to share your excellence!
Brother, I am new to your channel. I am so glad I found you. Your brisket got over a million views which is much deserved, and you are one in a million when it comes to southern cooking. I hope you are passing this tradition down to other family members because these techniques that you are using are priceless.
Welcome aboard! and thank you lots more on the way.
That makes me very hungry for meat.
I'm going to comment before watching the video and say your smooth ,deep , commercial tone voice is responsible for 3/4 of the total likes here 🙋
lol thank you.
LOL lock the doors and turn the lights down low
My daughter moved to Austin 11 years ago. After pilgrimaging to all the top bbqs in the area, this method contradicts everything I thought was gospel about brisket. I learned something new, Thank-you!
Your very welcome. just different styles and cooks glad you liked it and thank you for sharing.
I lived for 23 years in Central Texas. Low and slow is definitely the gospel I learned. This is freaking me out. Sticking around for the end results...
Great video! I am from Texas and I do all my briskets on a stick burner with a side box burning oak wood. Takes 10-15 hours depending on the size of the brisket. I love to learn new BBQ traditions, thank you for sharing! I have been to Snow's and they are AWESOME.
Thank you sir! Very much appreciated.
You cook a brisket unlike anybody else on RUclips, and you cook it the same way you're supposed to slice it...across the grain. I'm saving this vid for when I cook a brisket on my Pit Barrel PBX. I appreciate your old school approach. The influence of competition bbq cam be seen in most vids. I appreciate your common sense approach, because all I want to do is see smiling faces when I feed my family and friends.
Amen to that and thank you a smiling face is a happy face.
Dude, I'm not lying when I tell you, I wanted to bite my computer screen when you was cutting into that magnificent brisket! Oh, that looked soooo good!!! Great job, my friend!!
Lol thank you and thank you for watching your funny.
@bbqsouthernstyle well I bit my phone and chipped my tooth..... Well worth it
Same here. I could not agree more. Man. I am going to try this exactly and see what happens. Holy cow this looked good!
🤣😂🤣😂😭😭😭😭
Lol😅
Hats off to you sir. Old school all the way, gotta love it.
I grew up out in West Texas in the early 1950s. My family went to a lot of big barbeques. I always hung around the old pit cooks.
I would load mesquite wood in a burn barrel, then scoop the coals out of the bottom and carry it to the pits. The pit boss would point to where he wanted the coals.
I watched and fetched beers for the cooks. It was a great time for me. My grand daddy was proud of my working in the pits helping out. At the time, Grand Prize beer was popular back then.
My initial were GPB.
Everybody called me Grand Prize!
Or GP for short. I remember the men talking about the meats, basting the cuts with a small mop.
The big kettle of pinto beans over the fire. Loved listening to you and watching you do your thing.
Also loved that new pit, the air flow looks killer. Looking real good there my friend. God bless you and your family.
Thank you, my friend for sharing the good times of your life. Thank you for watching and Happy Holidays.
You, Sir, are not only a phenomenal cook, but your ability to impart your knowledge is absolutely incredible! By the way, your radio voice is so easy to listen to. Thanks for making this video.
Wow, thanks! Welcome and I hope you try this one out.
I enjoyed your brisket video, but I loved your voice even better. You have an announcers voice, I LOVE IT!!!
Wow, thank you! gald to have you watching and more on the way. Happy Holidays.
Still sticking around not going anywhere just been really busy with work. Just so you know I built me drum cooker and still use the exact same recipe and instructions for your brisket. My family LOVES it.
That's awesome! good to see you glad your move went good.
You said you were using a cheaper cut of meat, Well growing up in a poor working class family we never saw "A" grade meats but our mothers masterfully turned those cheaper cuts into the most mouthwatering delicious meals imaginable, it is the skill of the cook that creates the magic, thank you for sharing this recipe.
Yes that's all we had too was the cheap cuts. I never knew it was the cheap cut lol
This was my first time seeing someone go direct heat with a brisket and I’m Impressed
Thank you! Check out some other videos this is not the norm BBQ channel lol. Thanks for stopping in.
That's funny because my Stepson, who turns out some pretty good Que, is a Traeger disciple. He does the 3-2-1 method, uses leaky peach paper in the last hour, then wraps it in a beach towel and puts it in a cooler for another hour and a half. Don't quote me, but his brisket is nowhere near what I would call "juicy." I told him about this video & he gave me this funny look 😂. This brisket is obviously so juicy, you could wring it out!
Really loved to see someone do a direct heat brisket and to hear the history behind. Also loved how he took a Walmart cut and did more with it than 99% of YT “brisket experts” who all use $15/lb ++ cuts. Looked great, and didnt take him all day to do it. Learned a lot here, great stuff!
Amen and thank you brother.
Dude i totally agree, used the same bit of beef 95% of us would use.
Was a real word test.
I learned a lot from this video.
My Grandmother's Dad was a cowboy. He joined the herds at San Antonio for the drive North..Every year before Juneteenth, the Black community leaders would come to his house and give. him the money for him to buy a beef for them to barbecue. They would dig a pit and burn wood a long time to get a pit of coals. They would cut the beef half in two lengthwise and cook it like that. I wish I remembered the times for everything.
Oh, by the way, I like your style and pretty much agree with everything you say and do. But age and wheelchair have me using a ***gasp***electric smoker.I cook in pans now so no greasy clean up. I looked long time before I found a cooker that suited me. But with a little TLC I ccman still get a preetty descent piece of meat. My sfamily has run out until I am the llast one. My brother joined his wife's family so throughly that his kids don't know our family name .Now I am getting rid of family heirlooms. Folks, don't don't wait tilll you are past 80 to settle up.
I tried to clean up the typos by editing but failed miserably.
I love my electric cooker and pans for fast clean up its a must. Your still in the ballpark my friend Cook on Cook on.
Holly crap! This is REAL BBQ, the way man was supossed to cook meat and that's one good looking piece of meat. My wife was watching the video with me and when you sliced the brisket she was impressed and said "I want some!!". Thanks for this great video.
Edit: Forgot to mention that your prsentation was great, clear and concise instructions with no added bull.
Thanks for watching.
Most impressive video - though longer, there is no lack of information and worth every minute. Description and instruction, methodical, clear, well paced. No irritating music. The voice is amazing btw! Nice job. Carl
Wow, thanks! glad you liked it and thank you for watching.
Welcome! @@bbqsouthernstyle
Sir, this is the most beautiful thing to date that I’ve ever seen in the world of barbecue. I am on the carnivore diet and this looks exquisite. Thank you for this video and I subscribed.
Glad you enjoyed it! And welcome my friend great to have you with us. We have so much to show you guys this summer so stick around!
I just confirmed my idea that a beef cut like this does not need a fancy rub. Salt and pepper is all it needs to accentuate the flavor of the beef. So, meat + fat + salt + pepper + six hours in cooker + two hours in oven ( did you say at what temperature?) and that’s it. Personally, I never trim the fat, that’s where the flavor is. Excellent vídeo.
Thank you.
six hours over fire, one hour rapped on the cooker 2 hours in oven at 150 deg
Got it, thank you so much for the reply.
This man has secret BBQ knowledge handed down through lineage of generations. Nothing fancy, amazing results. I swallowed a good pint of my own saliva watching the last parts of this video. I could smell and taste that brisket.
lol thank you and thank your for the great feedback.
He's my new Go-To smoking meat guy.
Me too, I could smell and taste it. Even the steak look good! Great video!
That brisket was cooked to perfection. I don't like any pink in my beef and it had none and was not dry but so juicy and tender. I have just become a subscriber because of this. Thank you, sir.
Thank you and welcome!
Me too!
I've never seen anything like this. I've cooked over seventy briskets so far and screwed up a lot in the beginning. My go to now basically is to trim, wrap in a foil boat (to preserve the bark).
then rest for fifteen hours. I've got to try this now-great video.
I've got a pit barrel and you can control it with foil around the holes, but it's not easy. I've never seen a brisket on a barrel smoker and I'm impressed.
One other thing, do you cut down the deckle at all, because that won't render easily.
Thank you. Leave the fat and don't over think it. Very simple cook.
Nope I cut away nothing. on the pit barrel it renders down.
I’m a 13 year vegetarian who used to eat a lot of meat, who doesn’t care if other people eat meat, who appreciates cooking and those that cook, and who will probably never cook anything here. I subscribed. You are smart, well spoken, and your audible voice is spectacular. You could be an announcer or radio voice. Keep it up.
Thank you Kindly, very much appreciate the great comment and glad to have you with us. Funny I just put out a Chickpea salad video. Check it out I think you will like it.
You tough me so much more about cooking brisket! You are the Man. Thank you my friend. 👏🏻🎆☝️
Any time! So glad to help and I wish you great cooks my friend. Thanks for sharing and watching BBQ family.
FYI- You can avoid using the bars to restrict air flow… you can use flexible refrigerator magnets to (example is magnetic calendars) or a large round magnet for each hole. I have a drum smoker and it works perfectly
Thanks for the info!
I made one mistake. I should eaten before I watched this.
You left my mouth watering. The only thing missing was the aroma from the meat cooking.
I can only imagine how good that tasted. Thanks for sharing your wisdom.
Lol thank you I'm happy to give out the knowledge.
lol ...
I made the same mistake. I'm drooling over here. New subscriber after this.
Man!, I've just eaten a decent sized meal and that brisket is still making my mouth water, looks amazing!
Love the old school simplicity of the prep, sometimes doing something in a straightforward way, just concentrating on a few crucial details is better than trying to do all sorts of fancy stuff, gets the best results.
Right on! lol thank you.
Ol' Skool!
Never have understood why people try to to fix what's not broke...
It's not how much you make, it's how much you save!
May God Bless You and Yours!
LOL Right! Thank you and thank you for watching Happy Holidays.
This man just disproved all the myths in one cook.
LOL thank you !
I have to tell you Sir. This is one great video. It brings back memories of my brother who used to BBQ. But nothing to this size. He had big barrel cookers 55 gallon. Kinda like your new one. I bet your neighbors are starving when your cooking. You are definitely talented and really appreciate you sharing your incredible knowledge and experience.
Thank you so much. It's people like you that make me love what I do. Very much appreciated and thank you for watching.
I agree with your comment about your 50+ cookers that they all do something different. The brisket looks amazing! Thanks for sharing.
LOl right. I have like 20 more now days.
This recipe looks amazing ,and it worked out perfectly ,because that’s the exact smoker I wanted to purchase, I thought it was pretty easy to use and a no-brainer ,and now I know it works. Perfect thanks for all the info. And also, I learned a lot ,I knew nothing of cooking a brisket ,and now I feel like I can executed very well with all the stuff you showed us. Keep up the good work and thanks for sharing.
Anytime!!!!
I’m a 74 YO carnivore for a couple of years. I feel 20 years younger. This video had me drooling.
I live mostly on steak and ground beef with an occasional pork ribs and fish. I would consider that brisket to be a feast fit for a carnivore!
LOl thank you sir. Glad to see you still love your meats. I want to be just like you when I grow up lol. Thank you for sharing and watching.
This is an awesome video. Your personality is so chill. I like how you simply explain your own style of cooking without hating on what others do.
I appreciate that! thank we are all just trying to make nice food at the end of the day lol why hate on our fellow brothers and sisters. Thank you for watching and the great feedback my friend a safe and Happy 2024 to you!
Gosh you have a great voice, I suffer from stress and anxiety and you chilled me out ❤️plus you made my mouth water with the brisket 😊xxx
Awww thank you, I think the best part of putting out content are the comments from the hearts of people like you. Thank you so much and I am so glad I can relax you and bring a bit of peace to your day. Thank you for watching.
@@bbqsouthernstyle bless you x
Dude. This was EPIC. I have no idea how my Mom did this in the oven. I fall every time. Yours looks just like hers. she would Smoke on the cooker, 10 or so hours, then in the house in the oven. No one was allowed in there. Melt in your mouth no knife needed, use your hands, juice running down your arm. And if there was any left over, even cold out the fridge...Man how many times I got yelled at for picking at it right from the plate in the fridge. LOL Thanks man. Oh by the way, a good friend of mine who lives down in Australia but from the mid West of the USA and was ship mates with none other than Big Moe Cason the BBQ guru. loves your content. He is working on something for you and your channel. I will email you the work in progress. LOL Stay tuned, Don't go anywhere. 👍✌
Thank you lol you always have great stories. Looking forward to your mail.
Yep
I'm doing one in the oven yeap
I smoked another 20lb brisket using my Pit Barrel smoker and your technique and again it came out awesome. I slightly trim it though, it had a lot of fat on the point. I gave 5lbs to my daughter that has a catering business, she made brisket mac 'n cheese that sold out in one hour!
Thank you for the ole school way of doing brisket,I learn this from my grand dad who also did pigs,goats,deer over coals& wood ..digging a pit in the ground,for Christmas, 4th of July Celebrations this is the only way to get that good old southern flavor I am use to..keeping this tradition alive is important..thanks for sharing..from one Ole Alabama mom..keep sharing😊
Our pleasure! Thank you for watching sweet home Alabama glad to have you with us.
Tallow is used to help tenderize the meat after the bark has been developed. Some people use tallow improperly by spreading it on the butcher paper or not using enough for it to confit, that’s why they’re unsuccessful or don’t understand the purpose of tallow. I prefer using some of the brisket trimmings to make my tallow instead of buying it. And I never trim off too much fat from the flat side because it’s already leaner and smaller than the point. I also prefer an offset over a drum when it comes to cooking brisket because you get to keep the flat side away from the fire more than you can with a drum cooker and it’s easier to add more wood/ flavor throughout your cook. Hardly ever do I spritz unless it’s necessary. I think adding a liquid to a brisket before the bark sets will delay the formation of bark on a brisket. Some briskets I see don’t even have a proper bark.
I hear you my friend I concur thanks for watching and great comment.
Ill be smoking my first brisket on father's day for my family. God Bless you brother. 🙏🏽
Nice! you have a Blessed father's day and eat lots of Brisket. Appreciate you!!
From the moment he started talking, I knew this was a video I didn't want to miss. Thank you! I learned a LOT today... :) And that brisket at the end... Whoeee! That's the real deal....
Glad it was helpful! Thank you and glad to have you with us.
this brother here.. yo i've smoke plenty.. mainly on a Smokey mountain and i stress my self out every time.. you simplistic cook man is the way to go!!!
Glad I could help thank you.
In the 80s I stopped at an old shack on side of road with smoke drifting toward road. I bought a sandwich with 2 inches of stacked sliced beef. I've dreamed of finding bbq like that again. I've found it my friend. Thank you
That is awesome! Thank you, glad you did.
That brisket is perfectly cooked and looks wonderful. I really, really want that! Thank you.
My next brisket will benefit from this.
Our pleasure!
So I've cooked brisket several times using this technique and it works perfectly. I really like the mop sauce and it does help keep the fire under control. I cook to feel and my briskets usually take an hour longer, but there are many factors that could go into the longer cook. In my opinion the flavor over fire is about as good as it gets. Thank you for the lesson!
So true and thank you for watching my friend.
Oh my goodness!! I feel like such a slacker after watching this man with his skills on smoker/grill/BBQ! I am that guy he referred to that try’s 1 time and says never again on a brisket and tonight I today I tried to smoke a pork butt on my new Traeger and man it did not turn out. I know why, need to watch more of this channel and try again! Excellent EXCELLENT video! I am subscribed, THANK YOU!!
Ps…..dude I dig your style 😎🤩🙌
Are pleasure, thank you for watching glad to help!
I followed your instruction and I can honestly say best brisket I've ever made and in like 6.5 hrs thank you soooooo much. Will definitely do this again next time and every time going forward.
Great to hear I could help and thank you for sharing music to my ears lol.
Thanks for giving me the confidence needed to try a brisket. I've been procrastinating for some time. However, your thorough instructions and simple method is precisely what many people are looking for in cooking vids. Keep up the great work! I look forward to watching you become a legend.
Glad it was helpful! and thank you, have fun on the smoker you got this!
I've had a 55gal UDS years ago and did work out very nice for me. I had similar holes on top (where you put the rods), but I used regular machine bolts to plug the holes to help adjust the temperature. That might be cooler for you by not having to remove the rods when you need to turn the meat.
Thanks for the tips!
I have a Pit Barrel and that's a great suggestion. Should have thought of it myself.
I'll just make sure to use bolts the same size as the rebar for air circulation.
Thank you sir for a well informed, intelligent and entertaining display of properly cooking a brisket. I will definitely follow these instructions when cooking my next one. Very good video!
Thanks for watching glad to have you with us.
This is how central Texas Germans cook their brisket except they use garlic powder instead of onion powder. They cook over either post oak or live oak coals. Most of those old German families had a pit behind the house made of local stone or brick with a grill about 18 inches or so from the floor and some kind of lid that gave about 12 inches above the grill. Ours is made for half a 55 gallon barrel to be the lid cut length wise. Great video
Thank you and your barrel sounds like a good one.
Absolutely great video. In the age of off set and pellet smokers. True art of cooking good meat was handed down from generations. Glad I was apart of hanging out with my Grandparents teaching me the way food should be made. Great video thanks for keeping the art alive. 🤙🏻🤙🏻🤙🏻
Glad you enjoyed it and thank you for watching , love the positive feedback.
You have turned everything I know about brisket upside down, and I love it! I cannot wait to try your technique! I have an Old Smokey 22 inch barbecue pit, I’m hoping I can add an elevated rack which would give me 12 inches from the fire on the bottom to duplicate your barrel. Do you think I could make that work? PS , you have a really genuine and entertaining presentation style, they should give you a network TV show!
Thank you thank you! Yes, you should be good keeping that fire 12 or more inches away from the fire. keep the meat moist and you should be good. Also don't trim the meat. Thanks again and please let me know how your cook did. I will remember you Nick. Have a great evening my friend.
I can smell this cooking all the way to Michigan! You are the boss! I love this! Thanks for sharing! ❤️👍🏼🔥
Any time thank you for watching.
You made good points about tallow can't argue. I use it for flavor. My favorite way to fry chicken is in the tallow I make from brisket trim
Thank you just my opinion on things lol.
Thanks for your video tutorial. I appreciate the simplicity of the rub and method. I also appreciated the wisdom of your answers in the Q&A. Well done sir!
You are so welcome! thanks for watching.
Ever since i girst saw you do the high heat, no trim., direct heat, fat side down method ive been doing it and i love it
Thank you glad you like it and it works for you.
I too love the art of cooking and I have done my share. At 71 now, I don't have many to cook for as in the past. But my love for smoking is the open pit. Just enjoy sitting around after the meat is on, keep check on temps and adding wood when you need it. And the smell of my favorite wood, hickory. I know in Texas you have a lot of post oak. Here in SC, hickory is more abundant. Enjoyed your video
Thank you sir and I think wood is wood long as the flavor from it is good lol. No one has to use the same wood every time that gets boring lol.
This is my first BBQ video! You are fabulous! Great voice and great teacher. Have wanted a smoker but can’t afford those fancy things. As a woman who loves to cook ( even in late 70s😂) . All I can say is yum😋. Looking into buying one ( cooker that is) Have a smaller brisket in the freezr( that’s how I found you today😂 Wanted to know how to cook it!). So glad I did!
Welcome aboard! and at 70 your just getting going let me know how it came out you got this with years of wisdom on you.
I'm watching this video for the first time from Los Angeles, California, and I would like to say excellent job 👏🏾 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Thanks for watching!
I've cooked brisket with direct heat and they turned out great and I have cooked on indirect heat but mostly direct heat is a better cook to me good you explained it the way you did
Good stuff! and thank you.
Thank you for introducing me to old school southern style brisket. You've forever changed the way I'll look at cooking brisket, or any type of meat for that matter. I'll take many learnings from this and apply them to my own cooking ventures. Thanks again, my BBQ repertoire is substantially bolstered having found your channel.
You are so welcome. So glad to make a difference on your BBQ journey my friend. Keep the pit fired up and thank you for watching.
Thank you.... I had given up on brisket.... it is has been years since I have had a good brisket and you have renewed my desire to try it again.
Wonderful!
This is my first time seeing this chef. I'm so happy I stumbled, accused his show. The meat looks soooooo good. I'm going to try this. I know it won't be as good as his, I "m going to try it anyway . I also want to say. I just love, love this man's voice.
Welcome and thank you we appreciate you watching. I hope you give it a try you got this.
Your cooking skills are excellent! I love watching you cook. My only regret is that I can’t taste the end result! 😩. Keep your episodes coming! A fan in Baltimore, Maryland. TY✋🏽✋🏽
Thanks so much Baltimore we have lots more on the way with season 3 on the way as well.
The Pit Barrel is where it's at. Best smoker around.
Right!!!
Sir, you are an excellent pitmaster💯I followed your instructions on preparing my brisket flat. Using a 14inch Weber Smoker. That meat was so tender! my husband enjoyed it. I will be cooking the top part for the 4th of July, while my husband will be grilling on our horizontal charcoal barrel. Thank you 🙏🏾
Nice! sounds like great food and a lovely time. You are so welcome, glad I could help you out!
Thanks for the awesome video. I just bought a half brisket, gonna try smoking it today. I have always been nervous about smoking a brisket. But you explain it really well and I have confidence that I can at least try. Plus it's only a half so it's good practice. 🙏
Nice! let me know how your did.
One of the best chefs on RUclips, congratulations 👍👍
Wow, thank you
For a 45 min video, the longest part I couldn't wait for was the cut reveal. You cut the brisket in half and left us hanging...with putting the wrapper away and the temp of the brisket, you had just wait a whole 30 secs before seeing the inside of the brisket. I was too anxious to see it and it did not disappoint. The outside was perfect and the inside was surprisingly moist for a choice grade brisket and smoked directly for only 6 hours.
Thank you!
I’ve done this method twice. About the only complaint I have about this method is that it leaves a ton of the rendered fat at the bottom of the cooker. It’s literally a puddle. Which can be quite a pain to remove afterwards. Basically I wait until the coals have ashed out, remove the basket & ash pan, then scrape out the cooled solidified fat the next day with a large metal spoon then wipe the residual fats out with paper towels. I made the mistake of not doing that the first time & found myself fighting fat fires the next cook. But it’s really hard to argue with the flavor, speed & overall results achieved cooking a brisket directly over coals. Just wish cleanup was as easy as the cook!
Next time just add a few more coal to the end of the cook and let it burn off slow you will have no cleanup and a great seasoned cooker lol
I will always consider a no nonsense attitude with a deep voice. Well done, sir.
Thank you my friend. I'm a straight shooter. Appreciate you watching.
At Independence Park in Gonzales, Texas there is a section with rows of old school brick BBQ pits, trailer loads of oak. I built my third UDS last year and use a semi direct method. I place a 20” pizza pan between the grate and the heat source. Fat renders without flair ups, almost a convection style flow of heat. No fat trim, except the silver skin. Salt, Equal portions of Salt, Pepper and Garlic is the rub I make. Always a hit at church and family gatherings. Enjoyed your video, I enjoy learning from others.
Nice! sounds like you're a Pitmaster also. I would love to see your UDS.
Well done! Well done tutorial. Clear, concise, to the point and charmingly delivered. Beautiful voice! You should be in radio! Or better yet, keep that apron on and continue to give these great cooking demonstrations!
Wow, thank you! I do love doing cooking videos and comments like yours let me know I need to stick around and not go anywhere.
What a great video! Your explanations are very helpful. The only problem I have is that I can't watch without my mouth watering! Keep 'em coming!
Thank you my friend and that's a Big Fat 10-4 Happy Holidays and thanks for watching.
Hi from Australia. Great presentation and instructions! My mouth was watering. I'm a single70yo female. Living alone, no cooker, so I'm not likely to be cooking this, but gee, id love to taste it. You have a beautiful voice and this video was a sheer pleasure to watch! ❤
Wow thank you for your very kind words they hit home. Glad to have you watching. Happy New year Maureen.
This was really a great video. When I saw it was 44 minutes long, I thought I can't spend that long watching a brisket smoke. But each time I was thinking of stopping it, a voice in my head said: "Don't Go Anywhere". 😀😀😀😀😀😀.
In truth, I wanted to see the end result and it looked spectacular. Definitely gonna try this myself.
Thank you for taking the time to share your expertise!
LOl glad you stuck around too. Thank you and welcome.
Wow, how refreshing to see somebody cook a beautiful piece of meat and not overcook it. Thanks again I've been cooking beef for 40 years it's nice to see that other people out there are kind of appreciate it and cook it properly. Good job I'll be watching for more from you
Thank you and welcome!
Hell of a job brother great video and good explanation on how this cook was done.
Glad you enjoyed it thank you sir.
Excellent video. Very informative. When I seperate the point from the flat I actually remove the point section from the flat section by cutting it off through the deckle.
Thanks for sharing!
I just LOVE your commercial voice! I'm sticking around not going anywhere. Thank meat looked so good when you flipped it over. Definitely juicy. I have a question. Have you cooked brisket in the oven and if so, can you do a video? Thanks for the GREAT video, you made me hungry when you cut through the fatty part.
Thank you so much and to be honest I never did a oven Brisket may have to for you guys. Thank you for watching and the voice comment lol.
First time I ever had any level of success with Brisket. Thank You Very Much!!!!
Our pleasure! It gets better from here out!
Excellent job! Your method is absolutely the best. You're so correct about not injecting the meat.
Thank you glad you like it.
This^ is what I've been looking for. I subbed. I'm going to give this a try for sure! Thank you for sharing your family's recipe. It's a lot more natural, and simple compared to most recipes I've seen xoxox
Thanks for subbing! and we got lots more on the way.
With the way you are and the way you say that, you can't pay me to go anywhere.❤
LOL Awww thank you Josephine.
This is what it’s about. I’m so tired of hearing everyone trying to create the “perfect brisket” by adding wagyu tallow and paying $29.99 a lb for something that was never intended to be that. Well done on the cook and staying true to what brisket is for.
Thank you, we have to hold onto tradition or the next generation well lost forever.
Ill say this, your logic is definitely sound even if flawed in some aspects lol. The oil on the steak demonstration was hilarious. You can have good logic and end up at the wrong location btw. Trimming fat for offset cooking is ideal as you say it wont render. leaving more fat externally does nothing for internal moisture as that comes from the intramuscular marbling,you cook that out and all the fat in the world outside wont save it. You are right, tallow does nothing for moisture in the sense people believe. People mainly use tallow to soften the bark and prevent it from drying out while its being held in a warmer or oven until ready to serve. I make my own tallow with the trimmings. Finally, yes it does look visibly pleasing on the board as we eat with our eyes. Love your channel and your pit collection. Would love to see a behind the scenes of that offset build.
Just like great grand paw yoused tob
I can't recall the last time that watching a cooking video made my mouth water right after eating supper! Brother, that brisket's got to be one of the most delectable-looking objects I've seen on RUclips in a long time-Yow!
(It occurred to me that orange halves on the brisket would give it a slightly Chinese taste. M-m-m...)
Thank you.
being from chicago with family roots in the delta, spare ribs & tips are what i grew up on and can que them blindfolded with one hand tied behind my back. but i've been eyeing doing my own brisket and am glad i stumbled upon this video, as it makes sense from my perspective as spare ribs, as opposed to baby backs, have more fat that gives you not just flavor, but a "cushion" that keeps your ribs moist without doing backflips. this is the second video i've watched on untrimmed brisket and, as a novice, i think i've found the way to go...the only competition i'm in is how it tastes!!!
You said it!!!!!
Heading over to Walmart to get my brisket. Thanks for the heads up!
Thats a big fat Ten-4
Looks like you got it together. Love to watch.
Thank you!
Agreed, I have smoked briskets and turkeys multiple way. Removing the original fat, just to add a different type of fat later seems to be unnecessary. And don’t get me started on the “injecting debate”. Enhancing flavor with seasoning is one thing, changing the entire flavor of the meat is another.
Amen to that!!!!!
New Subscriber here. Quickest 45 minute video on You Tube. I always learn/steal the knowledge from experts. Now I can simply forget the rest and next brisket will be your technique. One tip besides not trimming is to keep the brisket 12" above the fire. I think that is the game changer. Thanks for sharing your information.
Dang that offset smoker you got is a beast. My oklahoma joes is about worn out after 10 years of BBQ. I'll end up getting a drum because of the efficiency.
Thank you! I have a few bigger ones than that around.
I had to take a COLD shower.
lol
OMG....Thats hilarious right there. I don't care who ya are. 😅
Made me LOLOL
Great video as always - have used this technique numerous times on my direct heat hill country cooker - both briskets and shoulder clods - meat about 24 inches above the coals - comes out perfect every time - thanks for sharing - Ted
Thank you, and you sound like you cook a mean Brisket too lol
You made my mouth water, damn that looked good, I could almost taste it. I got about a 8 to 9 pound brisket in my freezer, I learned alot, thank you
Thank glad to help now you have to go to work on the brisket lol
Mesmerising! What we call barbecue in Australia is grilling in the US. I am now determined to try this I could smell and taste it from here!!! Also such a beautiful voice it was a pleasure to listen to.
Welcome Australia and thank you. Glad to have you watching. I hope it turns out fantastic for you.
Probably one of the best, most informative videos on brisket that I have watched. Thanks!
Wow, thanks!