aris wrote:Is it worth smoking a brisket which has almost no fat or marbling? I'm thinking it may be a bit too dry, or can it be done adequately if injected? My other alternative is to cure it and turn it into pastrami.
I got a relatively lean brisket from my local butcher last week. It was mainly flat with a little bit of point.
I bought it on Monday and got my butcher to run it through his tenderiser machine quickly, which is basically a machine which punches some small holes in the meat (I could not see the holes once done and the structure of the meat wasn't compromised).
I applied a rub on Monday night and took it back to my butcher on Tuesday and he vacuum sealed it, which helped the rub permeate. I left it in the fridge until Thursday evening.
I had bought a good quality proper fresh stock, and on Thursday evening injected this into the meat and left in a large dish in the fridge.
Started cooking (from the fridge) at midnight Friday, overnight on low temp (225 f)
Crutched at 10.30 am Saturday (internal temp 170) with about 200ml apple juice thrown in and cooked until internal temp of meat was 203 f. This was approx 12.30pm.
Wrapped in another layer of foil, two towels and put in cooler box until we ate at 4.30pm and it was lovely and moist and tender.