Video wird geladen...

Video konnte nicht geladen werden

Zur Startseite

3,232,640 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren •via X (Twitter)

10 Kommentare

Profilbild von South Dallas Foodie
South Dallas Foodievor 2 Jahren

We need this oil sprayer too

Profilbild von John Gomez
John Gomezvor 2 Jahren

I’ve cooked brisket professionally for thousands of people and that’s not remotely true… The thicker and fattier the Brisket, the more tender. The thin ones dry out to easy. Mind your temps and know the process. That’s all…

Profilbild von South Dallas Foodie
South Dallas Foodievor 2 Jahren

Good to know!

Profilbild von Root
Rootvor 2 Jahren

In all my years smoking meats, I've never heard this. Would love to know the reasoning or science behind this claim. And no, I do not know all there is to know so I'm not trying to come off as being snooty.

Profilbild von South Dallas Foodie
South Dallas Foodievor 2 Jahren

I’ve been discussing this at length with my mother and we’re thinking that it might have something to do with how tender the meat is?

Profilbild von xGTExDopey
xGTExDopeyvor 2 Jahren

Hard to bend meat comes from distressed animals. Soft meat comes from animals who died peacefully. Same thing happens in hunting. You don’t want to kill a deer that was hopped up on adrenaline and kill him while he’s highly agitated. The meat comes out gamey and tough

Profilbild von South Dallas Foodie
South Dallas Foodievor 2 Jahren

Interesting take!

Profilbild von bubsub
bubsubvor 2 Jahren

4.19 for costko brisket out here in Az

Profilbild von South Dallas Foodie
South Dallas Foodievor 2 Jahren

Holy shit dude

Profilbild von 936ETC
936ETCvor 2 Jahren

Been smoking briskets for 10 years and only once I use that method. I look for a thick end in the flat. I want that end of the flat to be about an inch and a half.

Ähnliche Videos