kwtoxman
Well-known member
Yes, Soma chocolate is not only world class, and literally farm to bar with them and through them only, but also literally some of the best in the world. Look at the microbatch offerings and competition results. It's crazy awesome to be able to have this available to us, some of the best chocolate from all over the world.that looks like some really nice chocolate. this is our local place http://www.doninichocolate.com
That Donini chocolate looks good too. Variety is the spice of life and I'll try them as still relatively small more-end-use producers.
Went on another smoker adventure last weekend - have been wanting to try a brisket for a long time but the typical cost ($100-$150 for a big one at Halendas locally) was always a turn off...as if I screwed it up, it was a big loss.
However, my wife found 2 small briskets last week, one at $12 and the other at $14 - worth the risk. A good part of the flat was trimmed off (probably went to restaurant service, hence why these were comparatively cheap), but there was about 6-8" still on each, and the point was still on there as well.
So, rubbed, and on the smoker at 8AM.
This was about 5-6 hours in.
At about hour 7 I removed the point, diced it up, seasoned the pieces a little more, and made "burnt ends" (Google it) which is, I discovered, basically the meat version of crack.
An excellent appetizer while waiting for the brisket itself to finish.
The remainder of the flat as it came off the smoker at about hour 9-10. No, it's not burned, that's how it's supposed to look once it gets a nice bark. After it came off the smoker I covered it and let it rest for 30 minutes to reabsorb moisture before cutting.
And here's the end result on my bun just before I added gravy and chowed down. It turned out EXCELLENT, nice and tender, and a nice smoke ring even.
Looks great! This cook is analogous to my earlier recommendation to you with the pork shoulder for pulled pork. Go low and slow, and with NO wrap for the stall. The meat looks burnt but that is carmelized sugar, which is pure taste awesomeness combined with the meat. It literally is what a great cook of a sugar rub on pork or beef looks like. And cooking open to the air is needed to optimize the candying effect. It also adds more texture to the bite. My pork shoulder cook picture on the last page looks very black too. The result is a long cook that not many people make the effort on, but one that rewards that effort. Crazy good.
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