Injecting While Cooking

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Gentoo-HTF

Newbie
Original poster
Mar 28, 2021
2
0
Woodbury, MN
Who's tried injecting large cuts (pork shoulder, brisket, etc.) while cooking? Does it help moisture or flavor? Is it safer than injecting before cooking? Thanks for your thoughts!
 
I do not inject butts have tried and didn't notice much difference if any.
I do inject briskets and find they come out with more juice in them don't think it adds much to the flavor to them but maybe a little
 
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If you inject, do so before the cook. Use a recipe that applies injection to meat weight and use STP (phosphate) otherwise there really isn’t a point to it.
 
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There is a competition technique called a 'late injection', and you do this during the stall or before you wrap the big meats, or at the end of a chicken cook. You don't use your early injection liquid because that is too strong and likely heavier on the salt.... which has time to cook down during the first 5 or 6 hours the meat is on the pit. The late injection is just a flavor bump and helps with moistness. Think of it as a savory beef or pork au-jus that compliments the meat. A late injection on chicken thighs can be something as simple as a butter broth. I've judged chicken that was so juicy it squirted when taking a bite.
 
I actually tried that once, the liquid came out as fast as I was putting it in. May have helped some but it was pretty much cooked when I tried it.
 
I should have said I inject the night before
 
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