Hi all, I'm new at smoking meat and have run into an issue. I have a GMG pellet smoker that seems to do a good job but twice now I have run into the dreaded "stall" issue. Once with pork shoulders and most recently with a brisket. In both cases the meat reached just shy of 200f and then simply would not rise in temperature any further.In the case of the pork I finally gave up and found that it was actually done and easily clawed apart, however, the brisket was another matter. I decided I was going to be patient and wait out the stall. I had double wrapped it in foil when the temp hit 165 and then increased the smoker temp to 325. It only took another 1 1/2 hours to reach 198 but after 3 1/2 hours at a meat temp of 198 I could wait no longer if I wanted to give it a 2-3 hour rest period so I pulled it off the smoker. Well it was a disaster! The ends were nothing but charcoal, the bottom was a 1/2" of uneatable shoe leather and what was eatable was only because I dowsed it in bbq sauce. Since this was the second time this has happened I started wondering if the issue is the altitude at which I live. I am at an altitude of 8800' and water actually boils at a temp of 196 degrees. Could this possibly be the issue? Most of the cook smoker cookbooks I have say that the meat needs to get 205f to break down the collagen but perhaps this is not possible at this altitude. Any thoughts on this issue would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Dennis S
Example A
212° Boiling Temp Altitude:
It seems to me that a normal Brisket or Butt smoked at a normal Altitude with a boiling Temp of 212° often gets wrapped at 165°, after hours of 230° Smoker Temp. Then it's taken to approximately 203° to 208° IT to be just right.
So that would put the Finished IT to be 4° to 9° below Boiling Temp.
Example B
198° Boiling Temp Altitude:
That tells me that it should be good to use the same Smoker Temp of 230°.
Then Wrap it at 165°, just like the Normal example.
However here is where I'd change the Finishing stage. Like with the Normal Altitude example, the finished IT was between 4° and 9° below boiling (212°).
So that should mean that the Finished IT at your 8800' should be between 189° and 196°. That would be between 4° and 9° below your 198° Boiling Temp.
This should make Example A and Example B the same.
Bear