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Red's barbecued brisket

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Categories: Barbecue, Brisket Rating: 0
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Ingredients:
10 lbsBeef brisket
Procedures:
1Recipe by: chile pepper magazine - sep/oct 1990 most barbecue in texas revolves around beef, and more specifically, brisket.
2When you select your brisket, choose only "packer trimmed" briskets in the ten to twelve pound category.
3The smalller briskets don"t have enought fat to tenderize them, and the larger ones could have come off of a tough old range bull that no amount of cooking will ever tenderize.
4Avoid closely trimmed or "value packed" brisket pieces.
5The fat that was cut off to make "em pretty is the very stuff that would have made them tender! all briskets have a fat cover on one side.
6Ignore this! squeeze the thick end with both thumbs.
7When you"ve found the brisket with the smallest fat kernel, that"s the one for you.
8Take it home and build your fire.
9While your fire is getting going--i build mine out of a mixture of mesquite and oak--rub your brisket with a dry "rub." [see red"s dry rub recipe] make sure that the meat is thoroughly coated.
10This helps seal the meat, and adds a flavorful crust.
11Thoroughly coat all surfaces of the brisket with lemon juice, and rub in well.
12Sprinkle dry rub generously all over the brisket, rubbing in well.
13Make sure that the brisket is entirely covered.
14When the wood has burned down, move the coals to one side of the pit, place the meat away from the direct heat, fat side up (let gravity and nature do the basting), and close the pit.
15Some people add a pan of water near the coals to provide added moisture, but i don"t.
16Now, don"t touch the meat for 12 hours.
17Just drink a few beers, cook a pot of beans, and tend your fire.
18You"d like to hold the cooking temperature around 210 °F.
19In the brisket cooking area.
20Since "helpers" usually show up at the first whiff of smoke, you probably ought to put some of your leftover rub on a couple of racks of pork ribs and toss them on the pit, in the hotter end, and baste and turn "em for four and five hours, just to keep the animals at bay.
21Meanwhile, see red"s prize winnin" pintos recipe to keep you busy.
22Back at the pit, after the twelve hours are completed, generously slather the brisket with a basting sauce (not a barbecue sauce), wrap it tightly in aluminum foil, and return to the pit.
23[see red"s basting sauce recipe] close off all of the air supplies to the fire, and allow the meat to "set" in the pit for three or four hours.
24This really tenderizes the meat.
25Serve your brisket with beans, cole slaw, jalepenos, onions, pickles, and plenty of bread.
26Cold beer or iced tea are the traditional beverages of choice.
27You"ll find that a ten-pound brisket will yield about 8-16 servings, depending on the individual brisket, and the size of the appetites of the guests