I followed Jeff’s recipe https://www.smoking-meat.com/january-2011-smoking-a-chuck-roast all the way and while it tasted real good the end result was dry. Maybe one of you can help.
I found a really well marbled Chuck. I injected as directed with the butter liquid but due to time constraints had to inject rub then direct to my MES gen 2.5 now converted by a PID for a true set and hold temp control. I set up using a Mav 732 and a ThermoPro 820 using one probe each for the meat temp probes inserted side by side. The bbq probes placed together under rack 3 next to meat in center and reading 223F. The PID probe clipped next to the other probes and set at 215F. I used my smoke tube with hickory in the bottom with the vent open 3 inches.
I opened at 157F and probed with Instant read thermometer which basically agreed. After recovery the meat stalled at 165F for about an hour. I then bumped the PID up to 220F and held it. When the 732 IT showed 200F I brought meat in, wrapped in foil and placed in 175 oven to rest. After an hour I had to slice and found there was a slight amount of moisture but not juicy!
I want to smoke another chucky but I want to have the meat not so dry and look for advice from SMF. Since I never use a water pan and I’m wondering if I should? Perhaps a water pan on rack 1 over heat source?
Or, should I pull at a lower IT and if so, what temp?
Any ideas??
I found a really well marbled Chuck. I injected as directed with the butter liquid but due to time constraints had to inject rub then direct to my MES gen 2.5 now converted by a PID for a true set and hold temp control. I set up using a Mav 732 and a ThermoPro 820 using one probe each for the meat temp probes inserted side by side. The bbq probes placed together under rack 3 next to meat in center and reading 223F. The PID probe clipped next to the other probes and set at 215F. I used my smoke tube with hickory in the bottom with the vent open 3 inches.
I opened at 157F and probed with Instant read thermometer which basically agreed. After recovery the meat stalled at 165F for about an hour. I then bumped the PID up to 220F and held it. When the 732 IT showed 200F I brought meat in, wrapped in foil and placed in 175 oven to rest. After an hour I had to slice and found there was a slight amount of moisture but not juicy!
I want to smoke another chucky but I want to have the meat not so dry and look for advice from SMF. Since I never use a water pan and I’m wondering if I should? Perhaps a water pan on rack 1 over heat source?
Or, should I pull at a lower IT and if so, what temp?
Any ideas??
