Building a bark on your brisket (2024)

Building a bark on your brisket (1)

We are often asked, "How do you create such a nice bark on your brisket?"

-The short answer is "Air flow."

The proper type of air flow is the most important thing in creating a tasty crust like bark. Spices, spritzes, fat and cooking temps will also play a factor. Brisket bark should have a nice mouth feel, stay intact to the meat and be packed with flavor.

You are probably thinking, "Well what's the proper type of airflow?"

-Convective heat!

In order to create convective heat in our 1000-gallon offset pits, we open the firebox door, open the smokestack damper and let the pit breathe. By opening your air intake and output, you're introducing as much airflow as possible which helps dry out the surface area of the meat resulting in the creation of the bark. Not that complicated right?! Maybe... Maybe not. Throw in some ugly weather conditions (Too windy, too rainy, too humid, too cold) and things get wonky. Could this possibly be where the term Pitmaster was derived? Here at Terry Black's Barbecue, we like to be referred to as BBQ cooks. I've long thought I never wanted to be considered a master at anything because once you've mastered something, you're at the top and you've got nowhere to go but down right? So, if you're a master you've stopped learning, progressing and climbing the smoke stack of greatness? Ahh, I'll refrain from getting worked up over this title and save it for a later post! Back to bark...

Building a bark on your brisket (2)

When we season our briskets, we do so with salt and coarse ground black pepper. Salt will dissolve into the meat and enhance the flavor. Black Pepper on the other hand will sit on the surface and help create your bark to go along with a little spice that makes for a tasty bite! Too much black pepper will flake off but a good even coat will bind very nicely as your brisket shrinks in size and fat melts down throughout the cooking process. All other spices you apply will sit on the surface and bind with melting fat to help the bark formation.

Oftentimes you will see folks spritzing their briskets and they do so for several different reasons. One reason being, certain spritzes will help cake or char the outer layer and assist in bark formation. We typically start spritzing 3 hours in, once the rub has set and the outer surface of our brisket is nice and dry. Worcestershire sauce is one of those spritzes. ;) Lightly apply spritz because too much can be a bad thing! Liquid should not be pooling on your brisket. If it is, tilt your brisket and drain excess liquid off. With that in mind this is not always a needed step in the quest for perfect bark but weather conditions permitting, you might need to do so. Some days, the weather is just perfect, and your bark magically appears with the use of other techniques. Other days, not so much.

Can you build bark on fat? Of course you can but it's not ideal! Take it from the guy who has seen a few hundred thousand briskets. It will be a little harder to do and a lot softer than on top of red meat. Trim your brisket fat down to around 1/4 inch of fat coverage on top. As your fat melts down and starts to caramelize, your pepper will bind together and bark formation is upon you! Melting surface fat is a component of time and temperature. Our briskets typically cook for an hour and ten minutes per pound. Three hours before finishing and right before we wrap, we'll up our cooking temp by thirty degrees to do what we call blasting the fat, get it bubbling and really rendering down with higher than normal heat.

So, there you have it! My thoughts and techniques to building a beautiful bark! Remember, practice makes perfect and no one perfected their briskets without first cooking a few rather questionable ones! Keep on smoking!

-Mike Black

Building a bark on your brisket (2024)

FAQs

How to get perfect bark on brisket? ›

You're going to have to be cooking low and slow to build an awesome bark on your brisket, ribs or pork shoulder. Cooking at high temperatures is going to really make it hard, if not impossible to build a good layer of bark. Keep your grill around 225-degrees or lower for best results.

Does wrapping a brisket help bark? ›

It also gives you more control over the final appearance of the bark, and can help lock in moisture that would otherwise be lost as the brisket cooks. Most pitmasters recommend wrapping the brisket when the internal temperature of the meat reaches 165-170°F. You can measure this easily by using the MEATER thermometer.

How do you rest a brisket without ruining bark? ›

You can leave it to rest open in the air. Covering the brisket can trap the steam inside, which will prevent the bark from getting crisp. Second to resting, the key to the perfect bark is proper seasoning. If you don't want a crisp bark, you can cover it.

How to get a good bark on prime rib? ›

Place the prime rib in the fridge for the butter to harden and create a thick buttery bark. Preheat the grill to 275 degrees and set it for indirect heat. Depending on the size of your roast, the total grill process will take 2-3 hours.

What salt is best for brisket bark? ›

For best results, use coarse grind or restaurant grind black pepper and coarse salt (I find the best for rubs is Morton kosher salt). It is a flat, almost flaky salt with a nice, clean flavor. By having more coarse granules on the outside of a brisket, they help to form the crispy bark on the outside of the brisket.

Why is there no bark on the bottom of my brisket? ›

If the temperature is too low, the bark will not form. If it is too high, you will char the meat. A good temperature range to aim for is around 225-250°F. Around half way through the cook, moisture starts to evaporate from the meat, thus cooling the meat, and slowing the cooking.

What happens if you wrap a brisket too early? ›

Wrapping the brisket at this stage also helps keep it moist and tender by trapping the juices and preventing it from drying out. If you wrap a brisket too early, you may end up with a softer, less textured bark. If you wrap the brisket late, it may take a lot longer to cook.

Is it better to smoke brisket at 180 or 225? ›

Watch for an internal temperature of 185F (it will come up to 190 while it rests). If your brisket has little marbling or inconsistent marbling, the 225F temperature for smoking a brisket makes sense. It smokes the meat more quickly, preventing rubberiness, and produces a rich smokiness.

What happens if you don't rest a brisket? ›

When we take it out of the smoker we need to allow time for those juices to dissipate back out from the middle to the rest of the meat. If you cut into the brisket right after pulling it out of or off the smoker…all those juices are going to run out.

What should brisket bark look like? ›

Bark is the combination of the spices that you rubbed on your meat and the smoke from your smoker, combining with the meat protein in a chemical reaction. Good bark on a brisket or pork shoulder will make the meat resemble a giant hunk of track ballast or a meteor (the flavor is out of this world too).

How to get the best bark on brisket? ›

Trim your brisket fat down to around 1/4 inch of fat coverage on top. As your fat melts down and starts to caramelize, your pepper will bind together and bark formation is upon you! Melting surface fat is a component of time and temperature. Our briskets typically cook for an hour and ten minutes per pound.

At what temperature should you wrap your brisket? ›

I fell for the ol' “smoke at 225° until the meat reaches 165° then wrap and pull off when the temp hits 204°” routine.

What temperature is the brisket stall? ›

It's a phenomenon that happens after a brisket has been smoking for a few hours and the temperature suddenly stops rising. This stall in temperature can last for over four hours, sometimes even dropping the internal temperature inside by a few degrees. The stall normally happens right about 160 to 165 degrees.

How to smoke a perfect brisket? ›

Place your brisket into the fridge to dry brine overnight.. Preheat your smoker for 250-265F with some added Post Oak wood chunks or chips for extra smoke flavor. Add the brisket on to the smoker fat side either way. Cook the brisket until it reaches about 165-170F at the thickest and fattiest part (about 7-8 hours).

Should brisket be fat side up or down? ›

To set things straight, we're here to put an end to the confusion, so you can get back to the grill with confidence. For brisket cooked to flavorful perfection, fat-side-down is the way to go. This is the only way to achieve a brisket that is perfectly moist with a perfect bark on both sides.

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