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Posted
No time to search right now, will do that tonight.

I picked up a 5.5 lb flat yesterday at sams.

The only ones i have done until now were the corned cuts.

Meat Temp?
Approx time per pound?

I did see the rub thread below, I will reread it and get a few ideas.

Thanks
dave
 
Posts: 377 | Location: SW, PA | Registered: August 27, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Does this flat have any fat on it at all? If not, you could lay bacon strips on top, smoke it to an internal temp of 180-185 for slicing, I have smoked flats to 192 and they slice up fine. As far as time??? I don't really know, it can differ from cut to cut, use a wired remote temp probe and go by the internal temperature.

dan


BaltimoreBayside w/ a Smokin-Tex....

The Four Seasons......
Salt.....Pepper...Ketchup & Mustard.
 
Posts: 305 | Location: Maryland Eastern Shore | Registered: March 14, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Stuck it in last Saturday night about 8:00. At 225 took it out Sunday morning about 8:30 wrapped in foil and a couple of towels and put in a cooler. Went to my shoot, came back about 5:30 took it out and sliced it, it was great, the bottom 2/3 was a little on the dry side.

It was at 173 when i took it out, didn't have a lot of fat on the top, I hit it with some steak seasoning and covered with a few strips of bacon then hit that with garlic powder and black pepper before putting it in the smokette.

All in all the first uncorned brisket came out farly decent.

On a side note I thought that brisket was to be a cheap cut of meat, 3-4 bucks a pound?
 
Posts: 377 | Location: SW, PA | Registered: August 27, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tom
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Whole packers are sometimes reasonable,because they are difficult for the homecook to cook and there is a lot of waste.

They would have been ground beef,just like an old cow.

The cooking channels are now promoting overtrimmed flats,as lean braised pot roasts.

Some cultural/etnic/religeous groups use it mostly for pot roasts and will buy half the size that you cook.

The flats may also go to the deli/corned/pastrami market and the points to burgers.

Loss on a whole packer can easily be 50%,and requires the meat cutter's time/labor cost.

Thus $1.60/lb whole packer,works out to about $4/lb.

Hope this helps a little.


Good Q 2 Ya,Tom.
 
Posts: 6837 | Location: Satellite Beach,fl,usa | Registered: March 02, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
So I could pick up a whole one, cut and trim it to my liking and save a few bucks in the process?
 
Posts: 377 | Location: SW, PA | Registered: August 27, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tom
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The most important thing is that it cooks like you hope it will.

Also,the point is considered the best part, by most cooks.


You can slice it,chop for sandwiches,make burnt ends.

It is put into the comp boxes as burnt ends"judges candy".


Good Q 2 Ya,Tom.
 
Posts: 6837 | Location: Satellite Beach,fl,usa | Registered: March 02, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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