Try barbecue
Texas style, which is the beef brisket -- if there is any sauce, it is a
thin, spicy pan sauce made from the meat drippings. Look for a flat-cut
brisket, which will be a fairly even thickness, and leave the fat layer
on for the best results
Ingredients
- Brisket:
-
1 tablespoon
brown sugar
$
-
1 tablespoon
smoked paprika
-
1 tablespoon
freshly ground black pepper
-
1 1/2 teaspoons
kosher salt
-
1 1/2 teaspoons
onion powder
-
1
(7-ounce) can chipotle chiles in adobo sauce
-
1 cup
chopped onion
-
1/4 cup
cider vinegar
-
1/4 cup
Worcestershire sauce
-
1
(12-ounce) can beer
$
-
1
(4 1/2-pound) flat-cut brisket (about 3 inches thick)
-
8
hickory wood chunks (about 4 pounds)
-
2 cups
water
-
Cooking spray
-
2 cups
(1/2-inch) sliced onion
-
2 tablespoons
pickled jalapeño peppers
- Sauce:
-
1 cup
fat-free, less-sodium beef broth
-
2 tablespoons
Worcestershire sauce
-
1 tablespoon
cider vinegar
-
1 tablespoon
ketchup
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-
1 tablespoon
pickled jalapeño liquid
Preparation
- To prepare brisket, combine the first 5 ingredients. Place 2
tablespoons sugar mixture in a blender. Set aside remaining sugar
mixture.
- Remove 2 chiles and 2 tablespoons sauce from can; add to blender.
Reserve remaining chiles and sauce for another use. Add 1 cup chopped
onion and next 3 ingredients (through beer) to blender; process until
smooth. Combine brisket and chipotle mixture in a 2-gallon zip-top
plastic bag; seal. Marinate in refrigerator 24 hours, turning
occasionally.
- Soak wood chunks in water about 16 hours; drain. Remove brisket from
bag, discarding marinade. Pat brisket dry, and rub with remaining sugar
mixture. Let brisket stand at room temperature for 30 minutes.
- Remove grill rack; set aside. Prepare grill for indirect grilling,
heating one side to medium-low and leaving one side with no heat.
Maintain temperature at 225°.
- Pierce bottom of a disposable aluminum foil pan several times with
the tip of a knife. Place pan on heated side of grill; add half of wood
chunks to pan. Place another disposable aluminum foil pan (do not pierce
pan) on unheated side of grill. Pour 2 cups water in pan. Coat grill
rack with cooking spray, and place on grill.
- Place brisket on grill rack over foil pan on unheated side. Close
lid; cook 3 1/2 hours or until a meat thermometer registers 170°. Add
additional wood chunks halfway during cooking time.
- Preheat oven to 250°.
- Remove brisket from grill. Place sliced onion and jalapeño on a
large sheet of aluminum foil. Top with brisket; seal tightly. Place
foil-wrapped brisket in a large baking pan. Bake at 250° for 1 1/2 hours
or until thermometer registers 190°. Remove from oven. Let stand, still
wrapped, 1 hour. Unwrap brisket, reserving juices; trim and discard
fat. Cut brisket across grain into thin slices.
- To prepare sauce, finely chop sliced onion and jalapeño; set aside.
Place brisket juices in a zip-top plastic bag inside a 2-cup glass
measure; let stand 10 minutes (fat will rise to the top). Seal bag;
carefully snip off 1 bottom corner of bag. Drain 1/2 cup drippings into a
saucepan, stopping before fat layer reaches opening; discard fat and
remaining drippings. Add onion, jalapeño, broth, and remaining
ingredients to pan; cook over medium heat 5 minutes or until thoroughly
heated.
- Beer note: Smoky brisket calls for a smoky beer. Although the Lone
Star State makes some excellent brews (any of which would pair well with
Texas barbecue), try Germany's Aecht Schlenkerla Maerzen beer, which
has an alluring aroma of bacon and smoked sausage from the use of smoked
barley. Its full body and gentle malt sweetness balance the spicy
sauce. At 16.9 ounces, one bottle ($4) is enough to share. --Jeffery
Lindenmuth
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