The summer is upon us, and grills and smokers all over the DMV are heating up as well. For the series 鈥淔ired Up with Jake and John,鈥 海角精品黑料鈥檚 Mike Jakaitis and John Domen talk with some of the region鈥檚 best pit masters about their methods, with the goal of helping you level up your barbecue game.
Not much in life tastes better than a nice steak or burger thrown on the grill. Why would you want to mess with something so time-tested and proven?
Well, it turns out taking a few hours (or more) to smoke something else can taste even better.
Any talk about smoking beef starts with brisket, a cut of meat that used to be cheap and unpopular for years until barbecue gained popularity and people began to realize how good it can be.
Alas, the degree of difficulty is high 鈥 it鈥檚 hard to make a great brisket (although it鈥檚 also hard to make a bad one).
Even if you don鈥檛 nail it just right, odds are it鈥檒l still be good, though for what you鈥檒l pay for it, you want it to be more than that.
Kyle Norris, who owns Big Kyle鈥檚 BBQ, in Leesburg, Virginia, said brisket is his favorite, and while it鈥檚 difficult, it鈥檚 worth it. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a little bit gratifying when you have a customer say, 鈥榊ou know, I鈥檓 from Texas and that鈥檚 some of the best brisket I鈥檝e ever had.鈥欌
Most grocery stores usually carry either the point or the flat, though some stores will carry an entire brisket, which can run over 10 pounds and a couple of feet wide.
The amount of fat on it can also vary, and while most experts say you should trim it down to about a quarter-inch thick, Norris said he likes leaving a little more on.
鈥淵ou need that fat to render down into the meat and keep it moist,鈥 he said.
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After the brisket has been in the smoker for two to three hours, he wraps it in butcher paper, which is what pretty much every pit master uses.
鈥淔oil steams it and it speeds up the cooking process,鈥 said Norris. 鈥淏utcher paper is going to let some of the steam out of it and contain the juices at the same time.鈥
Norris prefers to cook the brisket fat side down, because it gets a better bark. World barbecue champion Myron Mixon agrees.
鈥淵ou want the fat down, because your heat in most cookers is coming from the bottom up and I want it to hit the fat before it hits my lean [meat],鈥 said Mixon. 鈥淎lways cook it fat cap down.鈥
Not everyone agrees though.
鈥淔at side up my friend, fat side up, fat side up,鈥 argues Fernando Gonzalez, the owner of 2Fifty Barbecue, in Riverdale. 鈥淔or our smokers, they tend to develop a great bark on top of the brisket, and the fat side up kind of protects the meat first.鈥
Norris tends to start his brisket at a much lower temperature than Mixon, and Gonzalez is somewhere in between them.
鈥淥nce you develop that bark you were looking for and once you鈥檙e slicing up that brisket it鈥檚 more enjoyable,鈥 Gonzalez argued.
The mix of spices everyone uses for a rub tend to be pretty standard: They all start heavy with salt and black pepper; some will add some garlic or spicier pepper on top as well.
You鈥檙e aiming for an internal temperature of around 200 degrees. Depending on how well insulated your smoker is, when and whether you wrap the meat, and how big it is, it might take between six and 12 hours.
But once you take it out, it鈥檚 still not ready. The brisket has to rest for at least an hour 鈥 and that鈥檚 only if you鈥檙e in a rush; if it鈥檚 really big you might let it rest even longer.
In most cases, pit masters will use an insulated cooler, with the meat sometimes wrapped in a towel or blanket. Initially, the meat will cook a bit more, but the juices will start to settle back in and become more evenly distributed.
When the temperature falls back to around 150 degrees, it鈥檚 time to eat.
Beef ribs are another popular cut of meat to smoke, and you would cook them pretty much the same way as a brisket. But you have more options than that.
Prime rib roasts and New York Strip roasts are also excellent out of the smoker, and cook faster than brisket. For those, you typically need two to three hours of smoke time, and an internal temperature of around 140 gives you a roast cooked medium-rare.
A chuck roast will take a little longer, but can be a cheaper alternative to brisket with similar results and flavor. It鈥檚 even possible to put ground beef in a foil tray, and after an hour in a smoker, you鈥檝e enhanced the flavor of tacos or chili.
Lastly, you can always take a good, thick steak 鈥 the thicker, the better 鈥 and 鈥渞everse sear鈥 it.
Steven Raichlen, whose newest cookbook is titled 鈥淗ow to Grill Vegetables鈥 and who hosts 鈥淧roject Smoke鈥 on PBS, said the reverse sear is a good way to make sure thick steaks 鈥 2 to 4 inches thick 鈥 cook evenly.
鈥淚f you think about a thick steak that you cook on a direct grill, you鈥檝e got sort of a char on the outside and then a thin layer of gray, and then it maybe sort of grays down to pink鈥 and then you have a blood-red bull’s-eye in the center,鈥 said Raichlen. 鈥淚n reverse searing it鈥檚 a much more even process.鈥
Throw the steak in the smoker for about an hour, give or take, depending on how thick it is, until you get close to the internal temperature you鈥檙e looking for. Pull it out when it鈥檚 about 10 degrees away from the desired outcome (medium-rare, medium, whatever your preference).
From there, throw it on the grill for about a minute or so on each side, then let it rest for a few minutes and dig in.
to the 鈥淔ired Up with Jake and John鈥 podcast on Podcast One.
