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Ridiculously long brisket cook post, Wagyu, Piedmontese, Angus

landarc

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My ridiculously long blog post, copied entirely here. This was all about tasting three briskets that we all talk about wanting to try, and, perhaps not all of us, but, someone mentioned it before.

So, it was a beautiful weekend, a long weekend, and it seemed like a perfect time to pull out the stops and try something that my friend Rob and I have been wanting to do for a while. Rob had already secured a Piedmontese Heritage brisket, and he was working on scoring a Snake River Farms American Wagyu brisket. Now, there are a couple of mouthfuls, we will look at those soon. All I needed to do, "you're only job", was to get a Choice Black Angus brisket.

The Three Briskets, before the fire

Using the impeccable skills of timing and planning that Rob and I have honed over years in business, we planned on cooking these, starting at 8:00am, running the cookers at 300F, grate temperature, and we expected to be eating at 6:00pm-ish. As soon as I arrived at 9:15am, we got the cookers fired and the meat prepared.

SRF Wagyu

Trimmed SRF Wagyu

In terms of the Wagyu, this is a hybrid beef, a cross between original Wagyu cattle genetics bred to American Black Angus cattle. The meat is far more marbled, at the point of grading, than USDA Prime beef. In handling this meat, it was clearly softer than regular beef. The image above shows ho the meat starts to pull apart once the membrane is removed. One of the things we noticed, was the when we pushed out fingers into the meat, the indentation stayed, unlike normal beef, that has a notable resilience. The deckle, or point, portion of the packer was so marbled, it was far more than any other brisket I have seen.

Piedmontese Heritage

Piedmontese Beef

Now, to the Piedmontese, this is a breed of cattle that is barely known in any circles. Originating in Italy, the Razza Bovina Piedmontese is a dual purpose cattle breed, that is most noted for a characteristic called "double-muscling". A genetic mutation that leads to excessively muscular cattle. As it happens, the beef ends up with lower fat levels, lower calories per gram and higher Omega-3 acids, it is a healthy beef. It is also alleged to be more tender. We shall see. One thing was for sure, while trimming, this beef 'jiggled' like gelatin. It was unbelievably soft, in BBQ circles, this was the ultimate floppy brisket. It appeared very lean, and a lot more pink than the other meats. Originally considered a dual purpose breed, this breed of cattle has become endangered, as it is so unknown.

Certified Choice Angus

The Angus packer​


Finally, there was my brisket, the Choice Angus beef, which I got from my usual supplier for these types of cooks, this is what I consider my bargain beef, from a local restaurant supply shop, it is normally a very good brisket, I ended up with a 14 pound packer. In the realm of 'you get what you pay for', the Wagyu and Piedmontese briskets required very little trimming or cleaning, a little membrane and some fat. The 14 pound Angus ended up around 11 pounds by the time I got done trimming. Several large hunks of fat had to be removed. This still appeared to be a good packer for our purposes.

Three Brisket trimmed and ready for rub

In terms of the rub, the point of this exercise was to pull together three briskets and get a good feel for the taste of the meat. That doesn't mean that adding no spice makes any sense. I prepared what I consider to be a simple rub, consisting of equal parts of Kosher salt and medium grind black pepper. I used RealSalt Kosher salt, and a Kampot Black Pepper/Tellicherry Black Pepper combination, along with small amounts of granulated garlic, granulated onion, citrus peel and sugar. This was applied with a moderate coating to all of the surfaces of the briskets. I do this as the cookers are coming to heat, so the rub sits on the meat for about 15 to 20 minutes, which gives it some time to 'melt' onto the meat.

Rubbed and ready

These were places onto the cookers, the Piedmontese, as it was smaller, went on to the large Big Green Egg, the Wagyu and Angus, closer in weight, went on to the 26" Weber kettle. The BGE was fired with Cowboy lump and apple wood, the kettle has a mixture of Cowboy lump, natural briquettes and apple wood. Both cookers were run at an average of 300°F. Barring the fact that I arrived nearly an hour late, and took far longer to prepare, as I was enjoying fussing with the fancy beef, this was the last point where we were even close to staying on the plan. Did I mention we started the morning with Bier de Chocolat slushies? Anyways...

Our host

Maple and Pepper rubbed fatty

Fatty Sandwich, with Arugula slaw and fried egg

Angus on the left, Wagyu on the right

No, I did not forget about the brisket, but, a man's got to eat breakfast. This was a few hours into the cook, no foil or paper, these were run straight through. briskets were flat down for most of the cook, I flipped after 6 hours, yes, 6 hours at 300°F, go figure.

Piedmontese and Burnt Ends

Well, a couple hours later, the Piedmontese was ready, as were some Burnt Ends. These were made form the Angus, which was nowhere near ready, but, I figured I would separate them point and do this. Rob and I had discussed burnt ends for a few days, I don't care for them, at least, compared to properly cooked and sliced point. Rob loves them, the compromise was the Angus was cubed and braised. It is worth noting, that along the way, some guests arrived, some bacon wrapped jalapenos and padron peppers were eaten, along with fried squash blossoms and loofah in tare.

These people did not smell of smoke

The Cookers

Okay, burnt ends do not suck..but, lookie...

The finished Piedmontese

Piedmontese Flat

Piedmontese Point

What you see there, is a moist and very tender flat, and a point that is perfect, absolutely perfect, rendered out, tender beyond belief. You could actually pick up those slices, but, once you placed it in your mouth, it melted. The flat was amazing, moist and just a little pull, so tender. But, the key thing, was this tasted so much better than any beef I have had in years. To this point, this was the best taste of beef I have had in a long time. In terms of what we had this night, this tasted the closest to the beef I grew up eating from my uncle in Idaho. What beef should taste like.

Wagyu Flat

Wagyu Point

The Wagyu, my photos don't do it justice, the flat was dripping with moisture, that shot is after wiping the board. It literally flooded the board with juice, to the point I thought I had pulled it too soon. But, the flat draped over the knife, it was supple, and just perfect to the tooth. As I was cutting, fingers from other people kept swiping the meat off the blade. The point, unbelievable texture and moisture. It was not as rendered as the Piedmontese, which would be true to the difference in fat and marbling, but, this was delicious fat, rendered almost to liquid, a perfect cut of meat. The difference in flavor was marked though, like other Wagyu I have had, the beef flavor is quite subdued, refined, it lacks the edge of blood and minerality of beef. This is not a flaw, so much as a difference in taste. If I was going to cook one brisket, to stake my reputation on, it would be a Wagyu brisket.

The Angus Flat

I'll some right out and say, that I was not happy with this Angus brisket. Almost from the point it hit the heat, it felt and looked wrong. It cooked painfully slow, refusing to color at all for 4 hours, despite a 300°F grate temperature. The flat that I pulled and ended up cooking at 400°F for the last 30 minutes never rendered. I had little hope for the flat. In truth, having gone on the cooker at 10:00a.m., this brisket was not pulled until 10:00p.m. But, when it finally came out of the stall, that stall, it sat at 165°F for 6 hours, it was actually pretty good. Even after eating the other two briskets, this flat was tender and juicy. It may be the worst cook I have had of a packer in 5 years, but, the end result was certainly good.

In terms of the take away, if I had it within my means, I would never cook another Choice Angus packer again. The Piedmontese had such a great flavor, something that was a throw back to when beef had a stronger flavor, with the blood and muscle still in beef. The Wagyu was subtle and transcendent in texture, the point was amazing, the flat was the most moist and tender flat I have ever had. I loved this cook, despite the blown schedule, good company, too much junmai daiginjo, and a lot of good eats.
 
Great write up and a wonderful exercise I'm sure most of us have wanted to try. The briskets looked so good. It would be interesting to know what all three briskets set you back. Is there a point where the cost of the choice out weighs the price of the piedmontese? just wondering.
 
$10 a pound for Piedmontese
$6 a pound for SRF Wagyu
$3 a pound for Angus

Does not include shipping.
 
You Sir are a true Pitmaster to be able to adapt and overcome 3 completely different types of brisket. A Great story, pictures and post! Thanks for sharing this. :clap2:
 
Heritage Foods has them, along with some AMAZING bacon

Oh, I grew Padron peppers this year, and when they ripen, they are large, red and spicy. Not super hot, like almost hot enough to need a beer right away. But, we made giant ABT's out of them, and they were incredible.
 
Awesome write up. Interesting that the SRF lacked minerality. The three WAYGU and 1 red Japanese brisket I cooked had exceptional minerality.

Congrats on a very successful cook when it counted.
 
Great exercise!

Seems the price is justified with the results...if only my wallet had better results.
 
Awesome write up. Interesting that the SRF lacked minerality. The three WAYGU and 1 red Japanese brisket I cooked had exceptional minerality.

Congrats on a very successful cook when it counted.
I have had Wagyu brisket a few times, and the balance and tasty and clean tasting fat has always struck me. But, I find the flavor to be very mild, this would be true for the steak and tri-tip I have had also. But, that is not a flaw, it is delicious stuff.

I plan on buying some Strube Ranch from Big Poppa Smokers at some point soon.
 
That test clearly was a horrible idea. I mean that much wonderful brisket in one place. Man, what did you guys do? Or the Horror!!!!

Great write up! I've never heard of Piedmontese beef before, and now I am wondering where I could procure some. I've had Wagyu brisket and high grade prime brisket before, and both are a clear cut above the standard CAB briskets I get. I would love to add Piedmontese to my résumé.
 
Thanks for the great write up, all three look excellent from here.. I need a napkin to wipe my drool! This thread makes me want to experiment with the Akaushi beef brisket that my local butcher shop carries...hmm
 
If you live near Kansas City, Paradise Locker Meats in Trimble (Just north of Smithville) usually has Piedmontese in stock. I've tried Piedmontese tri-tip (great) and one brisket (my first brisket, which I didn't get right). They say that Piedmontese shouldn't be cooked as long... or to as high an internal temperature as other beef and your results would seem to confirm that. Can't remember what I paid for the Piedmontese but I think it was less than the Wagyu, (Which they can get). http://www.paradisemeats.com/ Thanks so much for the comparison... I've been looking for one.
 
Thanks for the great write up, all three look excellent from here.. I need a napkin to wipe my drool! This thread makes me want to experiment with the Akaushi beef brisket that my local butcher shop carries...hmm

I want to try Akaushi beef as well. But, one thing at a time, I got loads of brisket leftovers right now.

If you live near Kansas City, Paradise Locker Meats in Trimble (Just north of Smithville) usually has Piedmontese in stock. I've tried Piedmontese tri-tip (great) and one brisket (my first brisket, which I didn't get right). They say that Piedmontese shouldn't be cooked as long... or to as high an internal temperature as other beef and your results would seem to confirm that. Can't remember what I paid for the Piedmontese but I think it was less than the Wagyu, (Which they can get). http://www.paradisemeats.com/ Thanks so much for the comparison... I've been looking for one.
It cooked fairly long for a 10 pound packer, as always, I cook by feel, never by IT. I monitored it, as I wanted to know what was going on. But, normally, I only use temperature and time as reference points. These were all pulled by feel. The Piedmontese was actually a little harder, as it never stopped being soft in the heat. It tightened up slightly, but, if not for the probe, I might have pulled it far too soon.
 
WOW I'm officially hungry now, time for a flour tort and a few slices of select grade.
 
Bob, I really want to try a Piedmontese.... That looks great and you have me hankering for one... Buy 3 and it is free shipping!
 
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