Saturday's brisket turned out great. We pulled the smaller piece and are eating it. The larger piece went straight from FTC to the refrigerator, still in the foil. Plans are to bring it to work tomorow for a lunch party. How should I go about reheating and chopping? Should I just shop it all up now and put it in a crock pot with some broth and heat all night? Or is there another secret I don't know about yet? I don't want it drying out.
Any ideas would be helpful.
If you are chopping the point or deckle, this would be my recommendation.
Chop it by hand or pulse in the food processor with a lot of the fat and all of the bark. Put in the fridge overnight in a baggie.
Take it to work with the crockpot. Start heating in the morning. As it heats, the fat will melt into the meat. Add beef broth, more chopped fat or barbeque sauce as needed to keep moist. A little butter never hurts anything. You may not need to add any at all. Fat is mostly the moist mouth feel in meat as it lubricates each strand of meat. Serve heated sauce on the side.
If you have a hot plate, buttered and pan browned buns are always a hit. The brisket can also be heated on the hot plate.
Serve with sliced sweet onion, sweet hot pickles or relish, pickled jalapenos and sport peppers.
Yee Haw,
Pachanga
It's a complete half, not just tips. I will chop it tonight and put it back in the fridge. I'll bring the bbq sauce with me, I thnk it will be a hit at the lunch. I just heated some that I chopped yesterday for a sandwich.... DEE-licious! :)
Rick....I was waiting for this guy to chime in!
He'll set you on the right track.
;)
Thanks for the vote of confidence Tubbs. This is the way we do it but I will be interested in other techniques and tips. I am always learning from this board and all the experience they share.
My experience and science says that plenty of fat in the mix is the ticket to keep it from "drying". The ample fat left over after the attractive slices are served is the reason chopped brisket was invented. In its solid layered veins, it puts people off but when it is chopped, it is pure flavor and no one is the wiser.
Good luck and slow smoking,
Pachanga
Thanks guys. I think I will be all right.
MP, got the sticks on and giong to take a play out of your book. As soon as the smoke is through, I'm pushing the Bradley back in the garage to finish them.
You go Rick!
Ain't this fun buddy!
Wait till Summer hits and its 99* out side with 75% humidity....an all new learning curve.
I think this will be a lifetime of learning. ;)
Yes I agree ;D The chopped brisket sandwhich is almost as good as sliced brisket straight from the ftc..... buttered bun, onion, a little sauce....... ohhhh weeee That ish is chronic!!!! I need another brisket.
Amen Snelly. The chopped brisket was a big hit at work. They devoured everything except the crockpot liner.... and I think one of them was eying it! ;D
Quote from: RickWL63 on February 16, 2010, 04:19:46 PM
Amen Snelly. The chopped brisket was a big hit at work. They devoured everything except the crockpot liner.... and I think one of them was eying it! ;D
ROFL
Way to go Rick. Problem is now they will want more.
Nice work, Rick.
Thanks for filling us in on the end result. And yes, CRG is right about wanting more.
Pachanga
Quote from: classicrockgriller on February 16, 2010, 04:21:50 PM
Quote from: RickWL63 on February 16, 2010, 04:19:46 PM
Amen Snelly. The chopped brisket was a big hit at work. They devoured everything except the crockpot liner.... and I think one of them was eying it! ;D
ROFL
Way to go Rick. Problem is now they will want more.
And you'll have friends you didn't even know you had start coming out of the wood work!
Mmmmmm...the power of brisket!
Glad to here you office lunch was a hit.
What ever you do, just dont tell them how easy it really is.
Just let them know that you had to slave over the smoker for 18 hr or so.
Quote from: OU812 on February 17, 2010, 06:03:36 AM
Glad to here you office lunch was a hit.
What ever you do, just dont tell them how easy it really is.
Just let them know that you had to slave over the smoker for 18 hr or so.
What mamma dont know wont hurt her....
Yes, they do come out of the woodwork, don't they? They said I could bring that anytime.... I said sure, as long as someone else buys the brisket... Today I brought in some venison/beef pepper sticks. The first bag didn't last through the first meeting. Little do they know I have more in my lunch box... ;D
I thought you were goin to say,
"Little do they know the sticks are made from deer."
Some people are weird about the deer.
Quote from: OU812 on February 17, 2010, 09:54:21 AM
I thought you were goin to say,
"Little do they know the sticks are made from deer."
Some people are weird about the deer.
I hear ya OU!
The only time I'm weirded out is when it's a muley!
Quote from: MPTubbs on February 17, 2010, 09:59:07 AM
Quote from: OU812 on February 17, 2010, 09:54:21 AM
I thought you were goin to say,
"Little do they know the sticks are made from deer."
Some people are weird about the deer.
I hear ya OU!
The only time I'm weirded out is when it's a muley!
I hear ya Tubbs theres somethin about eatin sticks and sage brush that makes a muley taste weird.
I'm slowly winning them over.... Most are finding that when I cook deer meat, it is very good stuff.
MP, I had some Muley once, I definitely have the same reaction as you.
Those muleys are bad...good head mounts but bad tasting!
Bone hunter here!!
;D
Quote from: MPTubbs on February 18, 2010, 05:42:42 PM
Those muleys are bad...good head mounts but bad tasting!
Bone hunter here!!
;D
...and give the meat to charity. ;)
OU...you know me too well!
Just grind it to burger meat. You can do quite a bit with it there.
My wife feels the same about Veal, she says that she can see the baby cow with their cute eye lashes. All i see is veal sandwiches,veal cutlet veal sausage...................... ;D