Carne Asada Burnt End Tacos

  • Some of the links on this forum allow SMF, at no cost to you, to earn a small commission when you click through and make a purchase. Let me know if you have any questions about this.
SMF is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

disco

Epic Pitmaster
Original poster
OTBS Member
SMF Premier Member
Oct 31, 2012
11,135
5,265
Canadian Rockies
Crack a beer, this is a longer post.

I was visiting friends in Montana and picked up a big 16 pound brisket at Walmart for an incredibly cheap price. I will be making corned beef from the flat but I wanted to do something different with the point. A great foodie on twitter, Deb Cage, posted a recipe for Santa Fe Tacos that I had been wanting to try so why not use the point in Tacos. I decided to do the point with Carne Asada seasonings as burnt ends and use that as the filling for tacos.

I started by trimming the brisket and separating the flat. There was an incredible amount of fat on the brisket. I guess that is why it was so cheap. I have been spoiled by the briskets my brother has been bringing me from Love's Meats in Vegreville. They are all nicely fat marbled and well trimmed.




I set the flat aside to go into a corned beef brine (another post).

I mixed 15 ml (1 tbsp) each of orange juice, lime juice and lemon juice with 50 ml (1/4 cup) of soy sauce. I mixed in 5 ml (1tsp) taco spice and 5 ml (1 tsp) chili powder.


I injected the point with that mixture every inch or so. Set the remaining marinade aside.


I sprinkled the point with salt, onion powder, garlic powder and chili powder.


I put the point in a 250 F pellet smoker and cooked to an internal temperature of 140 F. This took about 3 hours.


I dropped the point into the roasting pan and added the reserved marinade and 250 ml (1 cup) beef stock. I covered it with foil and continued cooking to an internal temperature of 200 F.



I took the point out and poured the liquid off. I defatted the liquid. I measured 125 ml (1/2 cup) of the liquid and added 125 ml (1/2 cup) taco sauce and 15 ml (1 tablespoon) lime juice.



I cut the point into a bit smaller cubes than normal and poured the tacos sauce/juice mixture over them.




I cooked at 250 F for 45 minutes. I turned the cubes and cooked for 45 minutes longer.

I made the tacos during the last 40 minutes. Here is the recipe that Deb posted.


I cut the dough into 16 pieces as I wanted thinner smaller tacos.



Pictures weren't taken after this as I was in the midst of plating and serving a dinner party but here is a taco I put together for lunch the next day. spread taco sauce on the taco, sprinkled with lettuce mix and chopped tomatoes and then layered the burnt ends on top. The taco was big and strong enough to fold well.


The Verdict

These were great. They had the nice spicy, citrus tang of carne asada and the great texture of burnt ends. The tacos are more like flat bread than tacos but have a great texture and made a good base that stood up to being folded into tacos.

Everyone had a couple of tacos but couldn't stop eating the burnt ends on their own. 

The following picture was taken by my buddy. It proves that Canadians shovel snow to smoke.


Disco
 
Last edited:
Great twist on Tacos...JJ
 
That's some great cooking right there Disco.    Looks great.

Ps.   Way to complicated for me to try.     I will just grool over your pics.
 
 
That's some great cooking right there Disco.    Looks great.

Ps.   Way to complicated for me to try.     I will just grool over your pics.
Har! I've seen some pretty intricate cooks by the Great Adam! Thanks for the kind words.

Disco
 
Great cook Disco: both the brisket and tortillas look delicious.

Quite a spring in your step there.. was that before downing the tacos?
 
Man I'm getting fat just reading your post!

I'd take a dozen or so!

Point!
Thanks, Case. We ate them standing up so the calories wouldn't count.

Disco
Great cook Disco: both the brisket and tortillas look delicious.

Quite a spring in your step there.. was that before downing the tacos?
Thanks. The brisk temperature gave me a quick pace.
 
I'll eat almost anything on a home made tortilla! Nice looking taco,last time I had tacos I heated the meat up in a pan and crisped up some cheese in the pan with it it added another level of flavor.
 
I'll eat almost anything on a home made tortilla! Nice looking taco,last time I had tacos I heated the meat up in a pan and crisped up some cheese in the pan with it it added another level of flavor.
Thanks, B1, that sounds great!

Disco
 
The tacos really looks delicious Disco!

Never thought of using burnt ends for tacos, but after seeing it, it makes perfect sense!

I can't believe you are in short sleeves out in the snow!

Point for another great smoke & recipe!

Al
 
Great job as always Disco

Richie

icon14.gif
 
 
The tacos really looks delicious Disco!

Never thought of using burnt ends for tacos, but after seeing it, it makes perfect sense!

I can't believe you are in short sleeves out in the snow!

Point for another great smoke & recipe!

Al
Har! It was only minus 3. No need for a jacket. Thanks for the point, Al!
 
I'm late, again, but that looks great and I've looked up the recipe and now have it saved.

Love me some tacos, and brisket tacos rock!

Oh, please keep the snow!
 
SmokingMeatForums.com is reader supported and as an Amazon Associate, we may earn commissions from qualifying purchases.

Latest posts

Hot Threads

Clicky