Cut a whole brisket in half?

  • 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.

mrtrung90

Newbie
Original poster
Sep 16, 2020
1
2
My local Sam's Club has whole prime brisket on sale at a fairly decent price, $3.58lb. I was thinking of getting one and cutting the flat from the point, freeze one for a later smoke. There's not a big enough crowd to warrant smoking a whole brisket till Xmas, and then I'll be smoking a rib roast. Is cutting the brisket in half acceptable practice? RAY
 
Yes it is. Many cooks do it. I like the flat better than the point so I usually use them differently. They are fairly easy to separate. That fat lines will help guide you.

JC :emoji_cat:
 
My local Sam's Club has whole prime brisket on sale at a fairly decent price, $3.58lb. I was thinking of getting one and cutting the flat from the point, freeze one for a later smoke. There's not a big enough crowd to warrant smoking a whole brisket till Xmas, and then I'll be smoking a rib roast. Is cutting the brisket in half acceptable practice? RAY

Hi there and welcome!

I'm with sandyut sandyut on this one. I prefer to the smoke the whole thing THEN also slice and vacuum seal then. Brisket seals and reheats amazingly.

If you really want to cut the approach I would take would be to do a very aggressive approach to how I trim my whole packers for cooking. I use the following image to explain how I recommend trimming away the thin portion of the flat. Do the same but move the green line way more aggressively towards the point muscle:
full.png


I say this because the flat muscle is the problem child and cooking together with the point helps keep the flat from drying out and makes for a better product.
The left over flat you can smoke or cook any way you like and you should have a pretty good amount (almost half the brisket).
In all you get a large chunk of just flat BUT you also get some flat point combo which is like the best of both your worlds :)

Here's my post on how I a trim a brisket where I pulled that pic from :)
 
Hi there and welcome!

I'm with sandyut sandyut on this one. I prefer to the smoke the whole thing THEN also slice and vacuum seal then. Brisket seals and reheats amazingly.

If you really want to cut the approach I would take would be to do a very aggressive approach to how I trim my whole packers for cooking. I use the following image to explain how I recommend trimming away the thin portion of the flat. Do the same but move the green line way more aggressively towards the point muscle:
View attachment 463394

I say this because the flat muscle is the problem child and cooking together with the point helps keep the flat from drying out and makes for a better product.
The left over flat you can smoke or cook any way you like and you should have a pretty good amount (almost half the brisket).
In all you get a large chunk of just flat BUT you also get some flat point combo which is like the best of both your worlds :)

Here's my post on how I a trim a brisket where I pulled that pic from :)

Good trim advice right here....

JC :emoji_cat:
 
  • Like
Reactions: tallbm
All great advice. One other thing to think about. Take that trim and point and grind into burgers.

Absolutely. Brisket burgers are the best, and so much better than a slice of dried out flat.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: JC in GB
I have cut briskets up and vacuum pack for later. On my flats to keep moist I inject with no complaint from the wolverine (my picky bride). I also wrap to finish off.
 
SmokingMeatForums.com is reader supported and as an Amazon Associate, we may earn commissions from qualifying purchases.

Hot Threads

Clicky