Here's a shot of the beef about 3 days into the soak...The load is weighted down with a 10-pound plate on the lid so they are entirely submerged in the brine. They 'bob' to the surface (in these shots) when the weight is removed.
Shown here are the 3 smaller briskets. They'll be flipped and go on the bottom next as I rotate the pieces in the brine.
The two larger briskets now on top. Since I took these shots a few days ago, I've continued to move them about to ensure good brine saturation.
At the end of the six day brining period, I pulled the briskets and rinsed them well.
The 3 smaller 'corned' briskets I 'food-savered' for next month's St. Paddy's Day festivities...
The remaining two biggies I gave a generous rub-down of coarsely cracked black pepper, coriander seed & mustard seed. Also mixed in a bit of turbinado sugar to the rub.
I let these dry for a bit before placing them into a pre-heated smoker:
At 140° I began giving the pastramis a good dose of hickory smoke. This continued for the next 60 minutes or so at 140.° Following the smoke, I wrapped them in foil & oven-roasted them at a temp of 200° About 4.5 hours later the meat reached the IT of 165°. I then chilled the two in the refrigerator.
Smoke beginning to roll...
Next day, I broke out the slicer and took the well-chilled pastramis out to begin the 'pre-packaging' process...
Good uniform color in the meat; a bit on the salty side, but after steaming some & applying mustard & kraut on a sandwich, the pastrami is quite good!
Ready to eat or be packaged up for later...
Thanks for lookin!
-Kevin
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever. — Hebrews 13:8