Ahhhh, now I see what was going on here. No wonder I was lost!
Looks nice. I'd eat it. I don't cook nor do I like the French. So I just looked at the pics.
I made this old 34 qt cooler into a vessel for doing long sous vide cooks, anything big like whole racks of ribs or briskets, or a whole bunch of anything. cooler is nice because it is insulated, so the heating element doesn't have to work so hard, plus the lid is tight so the water doesn't escape in the form of steam, which is nice for the really long cooks like the one I'm doing now, which will hopefully be a medium rare smoked brisket instead of well done, which is the traditional low and slow outcome.
View attachment 82297
this is a 7.5lb brisket flat that has been cooking at 130* since Thursday night.
View attachment 82298
seasoned with salt, pepper and granulated garlic and smoked it for a little over three hours in the Bradley with equal parts of oak and mesquite smoke. applied smoke at about 225* until the internal temp of the brisket was almost 130*, which is the temp of the water bath it has been in ever since. based on what I've read, to achieve a medium rare finished brisket and still have the collagen broken down properly, this has to cook like this for a minimum of about 52 hours, and as much as 72. I'm going to wind up at about 60 hours or so when I take it out tomorrow morning to cool it back down to 36 degrees in the fridge before I finish it on the grill with indirect heat from charcoal, oak, and hickory like I did the last one. the big difference this time is that I'll cook/smoke at about 250-275* until the internal temp is back up to 130* or a few degrees more. should be like smoked prime rib, theoretically.
I made this old 34 qt cooler into a vessel for doing long sous vide cooks, anything big like whole racks of ribs or briskets, or a whole bunch of anything. cooler is nice because it is insulated, so the heating element doesn't have to work so hard, plus the lid is tight so the water doesn't escape in the form of steam, which is nice for the really long cooks like the one I'm doing now, which will hopefully be a medium rare smoked brisket instead of well done, which is the traditional low and slow outcome.
View attachment 82297
this is a 7.5lb brisket flat that has been cooking at 130* since Thursday night.
View attachment 82298
seasoned with salt, pepper and granulated garlic and smoked it for a little over three hours in the Bradley with equal parts of oak and mesquite smoke. applied smoke at about 225* until the internal temp of the brisket was almost 130*, which is the temp of the water bath it has been in ever since. based on what I've read, to achieve a medium rare finished brisket and still have the collagen broken down properly, this has to cook like this for a minimum of about 52 hours, and as much as 72. I'm going to wind up at about 60 hours or so when I take it out tomorrow morning to cool it back down to 36 degrees in the fridge before I finish it on the grill with indirect heat from charcoal, oak, and hickory like I did the last one. the big difference this time is that I'll cook/smoke at about 250-275* until the internal temp is back up to 130* or a few degrees more. should be like smoked prime rib, theoretically.