these pictures unfortunately just don't do it justice. This is my first overnight cook on the Gator.
The players
14.67 prime Costco brisket (my first prime!)
Injected with beef broth and
Make it Meaty phosphates
molasses glue, way thinner than I use for baby back ribs, but still a great glue
1/4 cup kosher salt, 1/4 cup coarse ground pepper, tablespoon of garlic powder, tablespoon of smoked paprika, teaspoon of cumin. for the rub.
On the Gator at midnight, ran 185 until 9:00 AM or so, bumped up to 200 and finished at 225 at 1:45 PM. IT ranged from 206 to 197. Probe tender except for part of the point. I had to get on the road at 2:00 so wrapped in butcher paper and towel and cooler.
Served warm around 5:30 that evening.
I've been eating at our excellent new BBQ joint The Smokin' Oak Vancouver WA. I really like their brisket. Mine is simply better
.
I made a few adjustments and my total packer experience I'm sure is less than a dozen, of which only two were memorable, until now.
1) New pit. I was very pleased with the consistency of the new pit. I did run through a lot of pellets. I'm guessing almost a pound an hour over the 14 hour cook. Since you guys keyed me onto this, it's something I'll try to monitor. I still have no concerns.
2) No foil / texas crutch. I don't know what made me change, but it just didn't look like I needed it, I mostly had the time to monitor the cook as I saw fit.
3) butcher paper for the rest. Since I didn't foil, I just used butcher paper for the rest, probably didn't do a dang thing, but it looked traditional.
The smoke ring wasn't all that pronounced, probably due to the molasses. Same would be said with the overall smoke taste vs post oak and lump charcoal. The taste and tenderness where just spot on. I'm sure a tad overdone vs competition. Bark was to my liking, not too hard, not too soft.
I've got another one ready to go for 4th of July. Might try to get a better finished picture this next time.
DK