Texas smoked brisket is the pinnacle of American BBQ. It takes an entire day, demands patience, and requires understanding a few fundamentals that no shortcut can replace. When it works — and it will work if you follow this guide — you get a thick, peppery bark surrounding a sliceable flat that’s moist and deeply smoky, and a fattier point that falls apart and melts on contact. This is the cook that separates backyard grillers from backyard pitmasters.
Understanding the Brisket
- Two muscles: A whole packer brisket has two sections — the flat (lean, uniform thickness, used for slices) and the point (thick, heavily marbled, used for burnt ends).
- Choose USDA Choice or Prime: The fat content and marbling in Choice or Prime grade brisket is what keeps the flat moist during a 12–16 hour smoke. Select grade produces a drier result.
- Size matters: A full packer runs 12–18 lbs before trimming. Expect 30–40% moisture and fat loss during cooking. A 14 lb packer serves 12–16 people.
- The stall is real: Around 165–170°F internal temperature, the brisket will stop rising in temperature for 2–4 hours. This is evaporative cooling. Do not panic. It will push through.
Brisket Smoking Essentials
The Brisket
- 1 whole packer brisket, 12–14 lbs (USDA Choice or Prime)
Texas Rub (SPG — Salt, Pepper, Garlic)
- ½ cup coarse black pepper (16-mesh or coarser)
- ½ cup kosher salt (Diamond Crystal or Morton)
- 2 tablespoons garlic powder
The Wrap
- Butcher paper (pink/peach, unwaxed) — preferred over foil for bark retention
- Beef tallow or wagyu tallow, for smearing inside the paper (optional but recommended)
The Texas Method: No Sauce, No Shortcuts
Authentic Texas brisket uses salt and pepper only — no sugar, no paprika, no elaborate rub. The bark that forms from SPG and 12+ hours of smoke is the flavor. Sauce is not served on the brisket; it’s offered on the side at most Texas BBQ joints as an option, not a requirement.
Butcher paper over aluminum foil is another Texas distinction. Foil creates a steaming environment that softens bark significantly. Pink butcher paper is breathable — it retains moisture without killing the crust. If you wrap at all (and many Texas pitmasters don’t), use butcher paper.
Step-by-Step Instructions
BBQ Brisket Gear
Pro Tips for Texas Smoked Brisket
- Buy Choice or Prime — not Select: The grade difference is real. Select brisket doesn’t have the marbling to stay moist through a 12-hour cook. This is the single highest-leverage decision you make before the brisket hits the smoker.
- Coarse pepper only: Fine-ground pepper burns and turns bitter. 16-mesh coarse black pepper is what Texas BBQ joints use. It creates the bark — not fine pepper.
- The rest is as important as the cook: A 2–4 hour rest in a cooler wrapped in towels is not optional. It’s part of the process. The carry-over cooking and juice redistribution during the rest is what makes the slice juicy instead of dry.
- Probe feel > temperature: The thermometer gets you in the ballpark. Probe feel closes the deal. If the probe meets any resistance sliding into the flat, it needs more time regardless of what the number says.
- Don’t rush with high heat: Brisket cooked at 300–325°F can work, but 225–250°F gives you more margin for error and better smoke penetration. Hot and fast is a technique for experienced cooks — low and slow is the path to consistent results.