{"title":"How to Smoke a Brisket: A Beginner's Step-by-Step Guide","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/cooking/how-to-smoke-a-brisket","category":{"slug":"cooking","name":"Cooking"},"creator":{"name":"Hey Grill Hey","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE8q1FcoQ0wBypZb3jXw7Pg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZGbphpXROs"},"tldr":"Learn how to smoke a whole packer brisket at home: trim, season, smoke at 225F, wrap in butcher paper, and slice for tender, juicy backyard barbecue.","totalDurationSeconds":808,"difficulty":"advanced","tools":["pellet smoker or offset smoker","instant-read meat thermometer","boning or trimming knife","large cutting board","pink butcher paper","heat-resistant BBQ gloves","brisket slicing knife"],"materials":["whole packer brisket","coarse kosher salt","coarse ground black pepper","yellow mustard (binder)","oak and cherry wood pellets"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Pick the Right Whole Packer Brisket","text":"Head to the store and look for a whole packer brisket, not just the flat. A packer is the full cut with two overlapping muscles, and it usually weighs between 11 and 18 pounds in the Cryovac. Grab a choice or prime grade if you can. The extra fat marbling gives you a juicier finished brisket.Do the bend test right there in the meat aisle. Pick up the package and see how much it flexes. If it drapes into a soft U shape, that tells you the fat layer between the two muscles is thin, which means more even cooking and better texture. A stiff, board-flat brisket usually has a thick fat seam that never fully renders."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Trim the Bottom Side","text":"Flip the brisket bottom-side up and grab a sharp knife. A thin, flexible boning or filet knife glides under fat better than a big chef's knife here. Start by shaving off any silver skin and stringy fat across the bottom. It won't render and it blocks smoke, so it has to go.Next find the thick half-moon fat pad and knock it down. You don't cut it out completely. You just trim it flat so the bottom of the brisket sits even. Work slowly your first time. You can rewind the video and match the cuts as many times as you need to get it right."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Trim the Sides, Flat, and Point","text":"Run a long straight cut up each side to take off ragged edges and anything left from processing. Then move to the flat, which is the thin end of the brisket. Round those thin edges off. Left on, they just char and turn to charcoal in the smoker, so trim them before they ever see heat.Turn to the point, the thick end where the two muscles pile up, and tidy any loose overhanging chunks. Flip the brisket over and take the top fat cap down to about a half inch. Save your trimmings in two piles: the meaty scraps for homemade ground beef, and the pure fat for rendering into beef tallow. You paid for it, so don't toss it."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Slather with Mustard and Season","text":"Squeeze a thin layer of plain yellow mustard over the whole brisket and spread it around with a gloved hand. You won't taste the mustard at all after it cooks. It just acts as a binder that helps the rub stick and gives the smoke something to grab, which builds a darker, crunchier bark.Now season. Equal parts coarse kosher salt and coarse ground black pepper is the classic central Texas rub, and it's genuinely all you need. Sprinkle it on from up high so it falls evenly, and hit every side. If you like a beef rub, use that instead. Don't be shy with the coverage."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Fire Up the Smoker and Load the Brisket","text":"Set your smoker to 225 degrees Fahrenheit and let it settle. A pellet grill is the easiest beginner smoker for a first brisket. It holds temperature for hours without you babysitting the fire. Lay the seasoned brisket on the grate fat-side up to start, since the heat on a pellet grill rises from the bottom and the fat cap shields the meat.For wood, a mix of oak and cherry pellets plays beautifully with beef. This is a long, low cook, so you'll actually taste the wood you pick. Close the lid and leave it alone for at least six to eight hours before you peek. Plan roughly 90 minutes per pound of trimmed weight, then add two hours of buffer just to be safe."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Wrap in Butcher Paper at the Stall","text":"After six to eight hours the outside should look dark, crisp, and set, and the internal temperature will read somewhere between 160 and 175 degrees. That's the stall, and it's your cue to wrap. Pull the brisket and set it on a large sheet of pink butcher paper.Roll it up snug, tucking the sides in like a burrito so it's fully sealed. Butcher paper is untreated, so it traps moisture while still letting the bark keep firming up instead of going soft. No butcher paper on hand? Unwaxed parchment works in a pinch. Never use waxed paper. Then set the wrapped brisket back on the smoker."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Cook to Probe-Tender, Then Rest","text":"Let the wrapped brisket ride until it's done, which lands anywhere from 195 to 205 degrees. There's no single magic number. What you're really feeling for is probe tenderness. Slide your thermometer into the thickest part of the flat. When it glides in and out like the meat is softened butter, it's ready. Give the brisket a gentle squish too. It should bend and give under your hand.Pull it off and rest at room temperature for at least an hour before slicing. This is where a built-in time buffer pays off. If the cook ran long, you've got grace. If it finished early, wrap it in a dedicated towel and hold it in a cooler or a turned-off 170-degree oven for four to six hours. A longer rest almost always means a juicier brisket."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Slice Against the Grain and Serve","text":"Unwrap the rested brisket and save those juices to drizzle back on. The point and the flat have grains running in two different directions, so you slice them separately. Cut the brisket where the two muscles meet to split it into the point and the flat.Slice the flat straight across into pencil-thick slices. Rotate the point 90 degrees so you're again cutting against its grain, then slice it the same width. Cut the far crispy end of the point into cubes for burnt ends. Fan the slices out, spoon the saved juice over the top, and dig in. The pitmaster gets the first caramelized bite. You earned it."}],"recipe":{"servings":"Serves 10-12","prepMinutes":30,"cookMinutes":720,"cuisine":"Southern US","ingredients":[{"name":"whole packer brisket","notes":"choice or prime grade","amount":"1 (12-14 lb trimmed)"},{"name":"coarse kosher salt","notes":"equal parts with the pepper","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"coarse ground black pepper","notes":"16 mesh is ideal","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"yellow mustard","notes":"binder only, flavor cooks off","amount":"2 tbsp"},{"name":"oak and cherry wood pellets","notes":"or your favorite beef-friendly wood","amount":"as needed"}]},"lastUpdated":"2026-07-15T16:51:10.235Z","published":"2026-07-15T16:51:04.015Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}