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I have always cooked brisket in a slow cooker, to beautiful effect, but I'm going to be cooking for a crowd this week, and a slow cooker won't be available to me. (not to mention I cannot fit this brisket into my tiny slow cooker!) Are there good rules of thumb on how to cook a brisket in the oven (I don't have a Dutch oven, either) to make sure it turns out delicious and tender?

ariadnep
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2 Answers2

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Wrap it in foil, loosely, and roast in your oven at 250°F (121°C) until an internal temperature of 185°F (85°C), this should be about 1 1/2 hours per pound (but CHECK the internal temp with an instant read thermometer).

Note: an internal temp of 160°F (71°C) is "done" but for a tender slow cook brisket you want to let it go to 185°F (85°C)

TFD
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Cos Callis
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  • 185 is low. 195F to 203F is more like it. Scroll down to [when is it done](http://amazingribs.com/recipes/beef/texas_brisket.html). – Carey Gregory Jun 30 '14 at 04:30
  • 146°F (64°C) is done according to Nathan Myhrvold? – TFD Jun 30 '14 at 08:33
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    @TFD: That sounds like a sous-vide temperature - I think the cooking time is 76 hours. Good luck doing that in a conventional oven. – Aaronut Jun 30 '14 at 14:41
  • _When it is done_ is a matter of opinion once the internal temperature passes the [minimum safe temperature of 160°F(71°C)](http://www.foodsafety.gov/blog/brisket.html) **beyond that "done" becomes a matter of taste**. Technique also plays into the final result. Wrapped (as I suggest) in an oven may reach desired "tenderness" differently than un-wrapped, in a smoker... – Cos Callis Jun 30 '14 at 14:41
  • With brisket being a naturally tough cut, "done" is not just a matter of taste. It isn't a steak. I agree with Carey Gregory: you need to get the brisket up to 200F to melt the collagen into gelatin, making the naturally tough brisket more tender. – Chris Bergin Jun 08 '16 at 14:29
  • @ChrisBergin, "done" in the context of my comment ONLY refers to "safety" (once it's paste 160°F it is safe to eat)...beyond that is a matter of taste. The tenderness is NOT temperature dependent but rather TIME dependent (your in Texas, I'm sure you have heard the phrase "Low and Slow", the collagen breaks down over time once 165°F is achieved...if you go too high (not saying that 200 is 'too high') your brisket will start to dry out). More to your point though...however you like it is a matter of YOUR OPINION...not a matter of "objective fact" – Cos Callis Jun 08 '16 at 14:39
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By Dutch oven, I assume you mean a covered roaster suitable for stove top.

This is the technique taught to be by my old Jewish grandmother which long predates slow cookers. I use a covered enamel roasting pan but you can improvise with heavy duty aluminum foil.

Use 1 or 2 large onions cut in thick round slices. Lay on the bottom of the roaster. Place meat on top of the onions.

Put meat under the broiler until crust starts to form. This makes the taste richer.In all my various ovens over teh years, this part takes 6-8 minutes more or less. Flip the meat over and brown the underside.

Remove from oven.

Reduce oven heat to 275-300 F.

Add your moisture ingredients ( Traditional was dried onion soup packet and water or Campbell's Cream of Mushroom sauce with 1/2 can of water and some bottled American chile sauce or chile powder- just enough to make it red brick colored)

Place the top on the roaster or seal with aluminum foil so as little steam as possible escapes.

Place in oven for 1 hour.

After 1 hour or so, remove top/ foil, baste or flip the meat over , add more liquid if needed, reseal with the foil and return to the oven. Repeat at 30-45 minute intervals until the meat has been in the oven for 3-3 1/2 hours total.

You can tell it is done when you try to flip the meat over and it falls apart.

As long as the oven is set low, the actual temperature is not very important, but the lower the temp, the longer the cooking time. However, when cooking for 3 hours or so, there is not an appreciable difference. Just make sure there is moisture in the pan to keep the braise going.

Nanny Elsie added more sliced onions and the Knorr dried onion soup mix and water. Auntie Priscilla used the cream of mushroom soup and showed me the sliced onion base. Nana Jean used a large can of chopped or stewed tomatoes and added vegetable more akin to pot roast.

All used essentially the same technique and all were good, but when I make it the old fashioned way, I do Auntie Priscilla's version.

piquet
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