- Jan 20, 2018
- 7
- 4
Thank yIn general, the more Meat you expose to rub and smoke, the more of those flavors you get. Whether you remove it is your choice. With lean meat like brisket or loins, I leave the fat and score it. Lean meat needs all the fat it can get for protection from drying out and the added flavor. Fattier meat like shoulders and butts, I remove any skin and fat to expose the meat. There is plenty of internal fat for flavor and any cap fat is not needed. Now if I am rushed or being lazy, the meat goes in as is and I decide what I want to keep or remove at the end...JJ
Thank you. I did remove most of the fat. So we will see how this goes.I don't know.
My gut feeling is to remove it so the smoke can get to all the meat.
But... I'm probably all wrong in that thought.
Because they say where there's fat, there's flavor.
Hopefully the posse will come along.
But it's Saturday night, so they maybe out dancing....
I remove most of the fat & put it on a rack above the shoulder, so as it renders, it drips on the meat & keeps it moist.
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The best of both worlds!
Al
I remove most of the fat & put it on a rack above the shoulder, so as it renders, it drips on the meat & keeps it moist.
![]()
The best of both worlds!
Al
I remove most of the fat & put it on a rack above the shoulder, so as it renders, it drips on the meat & keeps it moist.
![]()
The best of both worlds!
Al