I just heard on the radio today that independent restaurants are starting to do better than chains. They speculate that online info such as Yelp is turning the tide and taking away the one advantage the chains have. What great news!I'm always looking for mom/pop type restaurants to visit.
Or maybe people are getting tired of being served food out of a production line...I just heard on the radio today that independent restaurants are starting to do better than chains. They speculate that online info such as Yelp is turning the tide and taking away the one advantage the chains have. What great news!
One important thing you should consider is ask the butcher clean it and trim it for you. Especially trim the excess fat so it won't be more than 1/4" thick. And place the meat on the smoker fat-side up.Fascinating. I'm gearing up to do my first brisket. I've been inspired by the fantastic stuff I've had in Texas, and even here in Illinois after learning that "burnt ends" in Illinois = wet (fatty) brisket in Texas. There's a place called Black Dog Saloon in Champaign that runs out of burnt ends every day soon after the doors open. My daughter and I were lucky enough to get them once, and they were as good as the stuff in Texas.
The grill-master from Weber appeared on WLS radio recently and cited this great article about Texas barbecue, which spoke well of the place I've mentioned here before. That got my attention. But he also brought some of HIS brisket into the studio and the staff agreed it was the best they'd ever had by a wide margin. So that sent me looking for his published instructions, which look legit based on what I saw in Texas.
I think I can come close enough with the process. My problem is finding a good brisket locally. They're not widely available, not the cheapest cut, and I've never bought one. Hard to pull the trigger on a $50 piece of meat when you don't know what you're looking for.
This isn't a grill recipe. It can be done on one of course, but I usually cook this during the week or on cold or rainy weekends.




A small correction. It's called "Chile de Árbol". The word means "tree" in spanish.Last common pepper is the Arabol.
Tomatoes? Little Italian boy New York City born and raised here. You can never have too many tomatoes. Also love chili and everything which goes into it. Chili is also a very important ingredient fore a hot dog condiment. Years ago I would actually take the time and effort to shred beef to make chili.Tomatoes and real chili go ok together but not so much that tomatoes become the main sauce ingredient. I add a can of onions, peppers and tomatoes to my recipe. That is the only tomatoes in the recipe.
There ain't such thing as "too much cheese", my friendjust to much cheese.
My wife saves the stems and chops them up and they end up back in the stuffing mix.Instead of scooping the stem out and placing the cheese mix, I'll just pile it all on top and cook a little longer, just to much cheese.

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