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Plan an hour a pound in a smoker. I start mine on the smoker for the first few hours and them move them to my pellet grill. Temp consistency is easier. As the other guys said, you can put in a cooler wrapped and it will stay hot enough to eat for several hours. If that time frame doesn't work out, consider separating the point from the flat and cooking them separately. It will likely reduce the time several hours.For the guys that are experienced, is there a way to estimate cooking time for a brisket by weight? I have a 17 pounder that I want done at a certain time give or take an hour or so including a good rest. mtmuley
I'm not an expert but this is really a very key point. It is very easy to put the brisket in a cooler and keep it for several hours. A lot of the professionals don't serve their briskets for 6+ hours after they are done. WAY better to end up with a brisket in a cooler for a few hours over having to jack the temperature up and/or not end up with enough rest time before serving.I've learned to shoot for a At LEAST 4 hours before I need anything ready. You can always wrap it and place in a cooler. Nothing worse than not having it anywhere near ready when you want it to be. Since your sol at that point.
A hour a pound plus a hour for resting so 18 hours is what I'd plan on. It will probably finish earlier but the worst thing you can do is pull it early or not let it rest long enough.For the guys that are experienced, is there a way to estimate cooking time for a brisket by weight? I have a 17 pounder that I want done at a certain time give or take an hour or so including a good rest. mtmuley