How to smoke beef brisket in a pressure cooker | Chef Cristian on Food Chain TV


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21 replies
  1. SBMfromCalifornia
    SBMfromCalifornia says:

    I would classify this as steaming the meat, not smoking it.

    If I may make a suggestion…. What I would do is heat up a cast iron skillet and add oil… and then brown the outside of the meat first (both sides) before putting it inside the pressure cooker.

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  2. Marian Clanton
    Marian Clanton says:

    I will be honest I made this on on a scale of 1 to 10 I give it a 4 and that reason being the meat should be marinated in a ziplock bag over night for all the flavors to incorporate with one another for a full flavor taste all the way through the meat.

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  3. Becky McKnight
    Becky McKnight says:

    Very interesting. I'm planning to cube my 3 lb. brisket in 1" or 1 1/4" pieces so that I can coat them in my chili seasonings and then add diced onion and pressure cook it all on a grill at the chili cook off next week. How long should I cook this in my Presto pot on a charcoal grill? I will add some liquid smoke too.

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  4. Mary Hackett
    Mary Hackett says:

    I loved the video.  You are a great presenter, but the music is too loud and distracting.  YOU want to be the focus of the video unless you are really hawking the music.  I will watch more from you as they come across my computer.

    Reply
  5. RandomTXDude210
    RandomTXDude210 says:

    Man, that thing looks nuked. Is that a function of the pressure cooker, or if you shaved off 15-25 minutes would it come out pink? I've never used a pressure cooker, but I find this result very interesting. Initially I'd think ~250F for an hour would have it coming out pink, even though it's under pressure so that ~250F is probably double that in practice. I know briskets are super fickle, too, at least the way I like them. I'm specifically planning to build a smoker this summer primarily to cook proper, 18+ hour smoked briskets to introduce all my northern neighbors to some true, southern style, slow cooked beef like I grew up eating (and, naturally, utterly unaware of how lucky I was to be getting award winning barbecue at a drive through for the price of a Big Mac).

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  6. Marian Clanton
    Marian Clanton says:

    I love some beef brisket. I noticed when you took it out after it was done you use a fork to remove it from the cooker Rather you are putting it in or taking it out you should always use a pair of tongs on all kinds of meat. Look there is a set of tongs on the counter We want to keep all the natural juices in and let the flow natural. Not from being punctured

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