Beef

Barbecue Beef Ribs 

Barbecued Brisket of Beef

Barbequed Beef Short Ribs 

BBQ Short Ribs

Beef Brisket From Kip 

Bubba's Fajitas

Carne Asada

Chili Barbecued Beef 

Jeff's Favorite Barbecue Brisket

Korean Barbecue ? Bulgogi

Korean BBQ Beef

Mooney's Sticky Monster Bones 

New Mexico BBQ Beef Ribs

Old Buffalo Breath Chili (1985)

Oriental Short Rib Barbecue

Oriental Short Rib Barbeque-Uldrich

Peppered Rib Eye Steaks 

Red's Barbecued Brisket

Texas Barbecued Beef Brisket #1 

Texas Barbequed Beef Brisket #2

Texas Beef Barbeque #1

Texas Beef Barbeque #2



Barbecue Beef Ribs

 5 lb Beef short ribs                     3 c  Black Jack BBQ Sauce  
Place ribs in a flat pan or dish. Pour sauce over ribs, turning so 
as to coat both sides; pierce meat with a large fork. Marinate 8 hrs. turning 
once. Remove ribs from marinade and brush off excess sauce to avoid burning 
Broil or cook over coals for 10 mins. Brush with marinade and cook 4-5 mins. 
more. Heat remaining sauce and serve with ribs.(Ribs may be cooked in a 
covered pan in a 350 deg. oven for 1 1/2 hours, if desired.)


  Barbecued Brisket of Beef
 
     1 c  White wine                          1 tb Minced garlic
      3 c  Apple cider                         1 tb Minced fresh ginger root
    1/4 c  Honey                               1 tb Whole coriander
      2 tb Dijon mustard                       2    Sprigs fresh thyme
    1/4 c  Soy sauce                           1    Brisket of beef (2-1/2 lb)
      2 tb Brown sugar, packed            
 
  COMBINE WINE, CIDER, HONEY, mustard, soy sauce, brown sugar, garlic, ginger
  root, coriander and thyme in Dutch oven or heavy roasting pan. Add brisket.
  Cover tightly and place in oven. Turn oven to 350F and cook 1 hour. Remove
  brisket from cooking liquid, cover and set aside. Transfer liquid to medium
  pan and cook over medium heat until reduced to a glaze and thick enough to
  coat back of spoon. Using covered grill, light about 12 charcoal briquettes
  and add small piece of mesquite or other wood. Be sure to place charcoal
  and wood to one side of grill. Arrange brisket on grill so that it is not
  directly over burning wood. Paint it with some glaze. Place cover on grill
  and smoke brisket 1 hour, turning meat and coating with glaze every 15
  minutes. Add charcoal or wood, small piece at a time, if fire seems to get
  too cold. Remove from grill, thinly slice meat against grain and serve.
  Offer any remaining glaze on side.

Barbequed Beef Short Ribs
      6 lb Beef chuck ribs, cut into         1/2 c  Packed dark brown sugar
           -1 rib pieces                       6 ea Cloves garlic, minced
      1 c  Water                               1 tb Ground red pepper
    3/4 c  Soy sauce                           1 tb Fresh grated ginger
    2/3 c  Dry sherry                          2 ts Chinese five spice powder
 
  Trim excess fat from ribs.  In large roasting pan, arrange ribs in single
  layer.  For marinade, in medium saucepan combine remaining ingredients.
  Cook over medium heat on range top until sugar is dissolved. Remove from
  heat; cool slightly. Pour marinade over ribs. Cover and marinate in
  refrigerator for at least 1 hour, turning ribs once.
  
  Cover roasting pan with foil.  Arrange medium hot briquettes around drip
  pan.  Place roasting pan on grill, cover grill and cook ribs 45 minutes.
  Remove ribs from roasting pan and place directly on grid; reserve marinade.
  Continue cooking in covered grill, 45 to 60 minutes longer or until ribs
  are tender, turning occasionally. Brush ribs again with reserved marinade
  during last 10 minutes of grilling. By Carey Starzinger
   on Sep 24, 1996
 



BBQ Short Ribs
      4 lb Beef short ribs                          -OR- Lite Syrup
      1 ts Salt (optional)                   1/3 c  Lemon juice
    3/4 c  Chopped onion                       3 tb Worcestershire sauce
      1 tb Vegetable oil                       2 tb Prepared mustard
    3/4 c  Catsup                            1/4 ts Pepper
    1/2 c  Aunt Jemima Syrup              
 
  Trim excess fat from ribs.  Place ribs and salt in 4-qt. saucepan or Dutch
  oven.  Cover with water, bring to a boil.   Cover; simmer 1-1/2 to 2 hours
  or until tender.  Meanwhile, saute onion in oil until tender.  Add
  remaining ingredients; simmer 15 minutes.  Drain ribs.  Place on rack in
  broiler pan or over ash-colored coals on outdoor grill so meat is 6 to 7
  inches from heat.  Broil 10 minutes, turning occasionally.  Baste ribs with
  sauce; continue broiling about 10 minutes, turning and basting frequently
  with sauce.  Serve with remaining sauce, if desired.
  
   Source: "Hurry, Let's Eat!" Reprinted with permission from The Quaker Oats
  Company Electronic format courtesy of Karen Mintzias
 



 Beef Brisket From Kip

 
      1    8 pound beef brisket                     All-south barbeque rub
 
  Recipe by: Kip Jones Well, I fixed my first brisket this past weekend.
  Thanks to all BBQ list folks for the helpful suggestions and recipes that
  made this endeavor a success. Most recommendations to me, posts and e-mail,
  were centered on the importance of slicing the brisket against the grain.
  Bear suggested baked beans for a side dish and I fixed that.  I had some
  input from the southwestern part of the US on side dishes, but,
  unfortunately, many of the ingredients necessary for these recipes are not
  available here in WV.
  
  Here is the way I did it:  7:00 AM Friday morning.  Unwrapped the brisket
  (8 lbs.) and washed it down.  Rubbed in the "All South Rub," not too heavy,
  and as per suggestions of Dwight's recent post, put his heavy coating of
  brown sugar to it.  On to the H20, gas fired bullet smoker at 8:00 AM.
  Adjusted the flame as low as possible + a bit.  One big, fist sized chunk
  of (1 hour soaked ) hickory. Water pan full. Put on the brisket, fat side
  up.
  
  At about 12:00 noon I checked it out and found that the water level was ok.
  and added, and maybe I'll not do this again,  added another big chunk of
  hickory. Checked the water level again at 3:00. It was ok. At 5:00 PM (10
  hours later) I took it off and put in a roaster pan with about a half cup
  of water. It was a nice brown color. Capped off the roaster pan with
  aluminium foil and put it in the refrigerator. That's it for day one. LAZY
  ~ Q,  huh?
  
  Saturday. 8:00 AM . In the oven at 185 degrees until 6:00 PM then took it
  out to cool for slicing. Yes, my mouth is watering from the aromas in the
  kitchen. By the way, in the mid-afternoon, I fixed a barbeque sauce, to
  serve on the side with the brisket. See Carey Starzinger's BBQ sauce # 23.
  
  Now, at 6:30 sharp, the totally unexpected, drop-in guests from out-of-town
  hit the door, drank all of our beer and stayed until 11:30. At this time,
  6:30 PM, just to be sociable, I quit drinking beer, so they could have it
  and I switch to scotch. At about 8:30, when I was finally able to face the
  handwriting on the wall, and still fairly sober, I did manage to
  refrigerate the complete dinner and kept on smiling at the guests. Oh yes,
  I did invite them to have dinner with us, but was declined.  So we hit the
  sack hungry and a little grumpy.
  
  Sunday. 4:00 PM. Take the brisket, the beans, the dipping sauce out of the
  refrigerator and let them warm up on the counter for about a hour. Pre-heat
  the oven to 175 and put in the brisket at 5:30. I finally serve it at 7:00
  and it is perfect! Finding the grain is no problem.
  
  You can cut this baby with a fork. If I made a mistake any mistakes at all,
  I might cut back on that last chunk of hickory. It was just a bit more
  smoky than necessary, so the wife suggested. I agree. I like a light smoke
  taste.
  
  Anyway, if you have a water smoker, don't believe that you can't fix a
  respectable brisket. Go for it.
 



Bubba's Fajitas
      1 lb Beef skirt steak                         Rings
      1 cl Garlic, chopped                          Juice from 1 large lime
      1 ts Cumin                                    Pepper to taste.
      1 tb Chopped fresh cilantro                   Green and yellow peppers
    1/3 c  Worcestershire sauce                     Guacamole
    1/4 c  Soy sauce                                Refried beans
      1 ts Liquid Smoke                             Mexican rice
      1 md Yellow onion, sliced in                  Warm flour tortillas
 
  Those self-appointed guardians of Texas cuisine, Bubba & Billy Joe, stopped
  by the other day and saw a request for fajitas so Bubba asked me to post
  his version.  Serves 4 regular people or two hungry Texans.
  
   Trim fat from steak. Pound lightly to tenderize. Place meat in
  non-metallic container. Top with onion rings. Combine remaining
  ingredients. Pour over meat and onions. Cover and refrigerate overnight.
  (At this point he says to go out and just party, party, party -- just
  forget about these tasty fajitas 'til tomorrow.) Next day - or whenever you
  find your way back home, remove the meat and onions, reserving the
  marinade. Separate the meat and onions. Place meat on grill, basting often
  with the marinade and turning often to prevent charring. You gotta do this
  on a grill - it's not the same in a broiler. Meanwhile, saute the onions in
  butter with some green and maybe some yellow peppers sliced into strips.
  When the meat's done, slice it into thin strips, cutting across the grain.
   Serve with homemade refried beans, Mexican rice, guacamole, picante sauce
  or salsa, sour cream, grated cheddar, your sauteed veggies and of course,
  warm flour tortillas to hold it all together. Bubba uses handmade tortillas
  he gets from a nearby restaurant. They're much better than store bought.
  (Hint: I think this recipe is even better with chicken, but don't tell
  Bubba I said that, 'cause he thinks real men eat beef, and only sissies eat
  chicken!)
  
  Thanks again Bill, Bubba and Billy Joe.



Carne Asada
 2 pounds flank steak
12 flour tortillas (corn are good also)
cup tequila
1/4 cup lime juice
1/4 cup lemon juice
1/4 cup orange juice
4 cloves garlic, crushed
1 medium onion, chopped
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 cup salsa
1 cup guacamole
1 teaspoon Tabasco

Mix juices, garlic, onion, tequila, Tabasco and pepper in a bowl. Add meat and marinate both sides. Cover and refrigerate, turning meat over occasionally. Let sit for 4 hours or more. Preheat grill. Place a few drops of water on each tortilla, stack and wrap in aluminum foil. Place on grill. Remove meat from marinade, reserving marinade. Place on grill. Turn steak and tortillas once during cooking. Brush steak with remaining marinade. Cook to your liking (12 to 15 minutes for medium rare). Cut into thin slices. Place a few slices of steak on each tortilla with salsa and guacamole and serve.
I found this at 
http://bbq.tqn.com/library
 but was unable to get this site on 7/19/98



Chili Barbecued Beef

 
           MARINADE                       2 tb Chopped fresh oregano
      4 ts Cumin                                    Or
      2 ts Chili powder                        1 ts Dried oregano
    1/8 ts Cinnamon                            1 tb Minced garlic
    1/4 c  Olive oil                       1 1/2 lb Beef flank or top round --
    1/4 c  Fresh lime juice                         Steak or pork tender
    1/4 c  Balsamic vinegar                         Curly endive -- radishes or
      2 tb Molasses                                 Other greens -- for garnish
 
  Marinade: Combine cumin, chili powder and cinnamon in small saucepan. Cook
  over high heat until fragrant, 40 seconds. Whisk in oil, lime juice,
  vinegar, molasses, oregano and garlic. Pour marinade over meat in shallow
  dish, turning to coat. Cover and refrigerate 4 hours or overnight. Remove
  meat from refrigerator 30 minutes before grilling. Prepare grill. Remove
  meat from marinade. Grill beef over medium coals, basting occasionally, 7
  to 8 minutes per side for medium-rare, pork 12 to 15 minutes, until meat
  thermometer inserted in thickest part reaches 160 degrees. Let stand 5
  minutes. Slice thin across the grain. Serve with a black bean salsa.
  
  Per serving without salsa: 245 calories, 15 g fat, 57 mg chol, 73 mg
  sodium. Source: Ladies' Home Journal Magazine/July, 1993  DOTTIE, in
  Irvine, CA         8-31-94  Cooking the spices, even for a few seconds,
  helps reduce their rawness. Your guests will never guess the ingredients in
  the marinade---it tastes sweeter than you might expect.
 



Jeff's Favorite Barbecue Brisket
 
      6 lb Beef brisket                      1/4 lb Mesquite wood
           Smoker for cooking                       Basting sauce
     10 lb Charcoal                                 Barbecue sauce
 
  This is a perfect way to spend a day, and makes a meal fit for a king!
  
  It really takes a smoker to make this successfully, but creative folks can
  use whatever's handy.
  
  Select a good quality beef brisket.  Trim off excess fat and store in
  refrigerator until ready to barbecue.
  
  If you wish, marinade the meat for additional flavor or tenderness. A good
  marinade can consist of water, Worcestershire Sauce, Soy Sauce, pepper,
  lime or lemon juice - whatever you like! (No Salt, though)
  
  Start 8 lbs. of the charcoal and allow coals to develop gray ash over all
  before beginning to cook. Reserve the remaining 2 lbs. for adding when
  needed later. Add wood that has been soaking in water for an hour or so.
  
  Cook the meat on a grate approx. 8 inches over the coals, adding charcoal
  and wood to fire as needed.  It isn't necessary to keep a heavy smoke at
  all times, just 1/2 of the cooking time. Use a meat thermometer to
  determine doneness of meat to your preference.  If the smoker has an
  indicator for temperature, a low heat is fine. Coals and wood tend to burn
  at lower temperatures when enclosed in a smoker.
      While cooking, it is essential to baste often with the basting sauce.
  Usually every 10 minutes or even less will ensure a juicy and delicious
  brisket.
  
    If basting with another sauce, remember that anything containing sugar or
  tomato will burn, leaving a scorched flavor. That's especially true with
  meats cooked over long periods of time.
  
    Serve with the warmed barbecue sauce and breads, beans, salad or
  potatoes.
  
  Enjoy!    Jeff Duke
 



Korean Barbecue - Bulgogi
 
      2 lb Lean Beef Tenderloin                2 ts Finely Minced Fresh Ginger
    1/2 c  Light Soy Sauce                   1/2 ts Black Pepper
    1/4 c  Dark Soy Sauce                      1 tb Sugar
    1/2 c  Water                               2 tb White Sesame Seeds, Toasted
      3 tb Finely Chopped Green Onion               - And Ground
      3 ts Crushed Garlic                      1 tb Sesame Oil
 
  Bulgogi or Bulgalbi, broiled (grilled) beef strips and beef ribs
  respectively, exemplify an age-old tradition of cooking on a curved iron
  hotplate - a tradition that is matched in northern China and neighboring
  Mongolia as introduced by the Manchurians.  Today this has been streamlined
  for table service, with specially built cone-shaped hotplates fitted over
  tabletop burners, to provide an enjoyable and intimate eating experience.
  Meats of all kinds, including mutton, pork and poultry, offal and seafood,
  are cooked in this way, being first marinated in a spicy mixture
  encompassing the characteristic seasonings: soy sauce, sesame oil, garlic,
  ginger, pepper or chili, toasted sesame seeds and green onions. The meat is
  marinated well in advance so that the flavor is intense. Cooking time is
  minimal - just enough to cook through and seal the surface. Serve Bulgogi
  with white rice and yangnyum kanjang sauce, together with a selection of
  accompaniments such as kim chee (chili pickled cabbage) and jeot khal
  (spiced whitefish).
  
  Cut the beef across the grain into very thin slices, then cut into narrow
  strips.  In a glass or stainless steel dish mix all remaining ingredients
  together. Add the beef and stir thoroughly. Cover and let marinate for at
  least 3 hours.
  
  Preheat a tabletop broiler (Hibachi or Ghengis Kahn Cooker), protecting the
  tabletop with an asbestos mat or other suitable heat shield.
  
  Each diner, or the host/hostess, places a portion of meat on the broiler
  (griller) and cooks it quickly on both sides. The meat is dipped into the
  sauce before eating. Use wooden chopsticks or small forks/fondue forks.
 



Korean BBQ Beef
 
      2 lb Beef sirloin tips; cut into         2    Cl Garlic; minced
    1/2 c  Soy sauce                           4 tb Sesame oil
      6 tb Sugar                               1 tb Sesame seeds
      6    Green onions                   
 
  Recipe by: Anna Baird  Mix it all together and
  marinate at least 2 hours.   Can either cook it on the grill as kebabs or
  stir-fry by itself. Enjoy.
  
  When I don't have sirloin tips, I use flank steak and it tastes just as goo
  Also, I substitute hot pepper sesame oil and also add cayenne pepper for
  more kick.  The sugar allows the beef to caramelize a little (I tried using
  cane sugar once but it didn't caramelize).
  
  NOTES: Just tried this recipe recently (4 or 5 times) and it is absolutely
  wonderful - from Omaha Steaks recipe book
 



Mooney's Sticky Monster Bones
 
      5 lb Meaty beef ribs                       Marinade
      1    10 1/2 oz can beef broth         1 c  Mesquite flavored bar-b-q sauce
           Dry rib seasoning              1/4 c  Apple cider
           Barbecue sauce                 
 
  Combine marinade and marinade meat in refrigerate over night. To freeze put
  meat and marinade in ziploc and refrigerate the night before grilling.
  
  Set up grill use hickory chunks of wood and pour beef broth on drip pan and
  add dry rib seasoning.
  
  Remove ribs from marinade and drain and liberally add barbq seasoning.
  Place the ribs on grill over the drip pan and smoke 2 1/2 to 3 hours. Add
  barbq sauce at least two to three times during the final hour. Will hold
  nicely in 200 degree oven for several hours if covered. Serve with extra
  sauce. Typed by Annette Johnsen Source Kansas City Barbq Society
 



New Mexico BBQ Beef Ribs
 
    1/3 c  Red Chili Sauce                     1 ea Onion, diced
      1 c  Dry Red Wine                      1/2 ts Salt
      2 tb Olive Oil                         1/4 ts Pepper, fresh Ground
      1 ea Clove Garlic, large, minced         4 lb Beef Short Ribs
 
  Combine all ingredients except ribs.  Let sit for 15 minutes.  Marinate
  ribs in sauce thoroughly.  Sear 5 minutes on each side.  Cove grill with
  heavy foil, add ribs and spoon sauce over.  Cook for 5 minutes, turn and
  spoon more sauce.  Keep turning and saucing every 15 - 30 minutes until
  done.
 



Old Buffalo Breath Chili (1985)
 
      5 lb Chuck roast                         2 tb Mild chile
      8    Cl Garlic ; crushed                 2 tb Hot chile
    1/4 c  Olive oil                                Beef broth
      2 tb Mexican oregano                          Masa harina
      1 tb Cumin seeds ; toasted and gr             Small whole dried piquin chi
           Juice of 1 lime                          Salt ; to taste
 
  Recipe by: John Thorne Sep/Oct Chile Pepper Magazine This writer's own. On
  the Texas range, firewood meant mesquite. Not only did the trail cook use
  it for his own pit cooking, but the ranch cook used it to fire his wood
  stove. Until it was replaced with gas and electric, mesquite-flavored
  grilling dominated rural Texas cooking with its distinctive sweet savor.
  The meat of this chili is seared over charcoal where mesquite chips have
  been set to flame (the taste of mesquite charcoal is indistinguishable from
  that of any other hardwood), which gives the resulting chili a haunting
  hint of smoke -- and without tasting a bit like barbecue, since there is no
  onion or tomato in it, none at all.
  
  For the fire: mesquite wood chips and hardwood charcoal.
  
  For the Rub: 2 or 3 cloves of garlic and chili powder.
  
  The chuck roast should be as lean as possible and cut at least three inches
  thick. Two or three hours before you plan to make the chili, rub the meat
  all over with a mash of crushed garlic and salt then sprinkle it with chili
  powder to coat it lightly. Loosely cover it with plastic and set it aside.
  
  Fire up enough hardwood charcoal to sear the meat in an outdoor grill,
  preferably one with a cover. At the same time, soak a few handfuls of the
  mesquite chips in the water. When the coals are covered with gray ash,
  spread them out evenly, and scatter the soaked mesquite chips over them.
  Then immediately set the meat on a grill over the smoke, about an inch from
  the coals. Cover the grill and adjust the dampers to maintain a slow,
  steady heat. Let meat sear for about 12 minutes (this is meant to flavor,
  not to cook the meat) and turn over to sear the other side for the same
  amount of time. Remove it from the heat, saving any juices on its surface,
  and transfer to the refrigerator. Let it cool thoroughly, about one hour.
  
  After the meat has cooled, trim away any surface fat or cartilage. With a
  sharp knife, cube the meat into the smallest pieces you have patience for,
  saving all juices. Heat the olive oil in a large, heavy pot over moderate
  heat. Stir in the garlic and saute until it turns translucent. Stir in the
  meat and all reserved meat juices, adding just enough beef broth to cover,
  or about one cup. Pour in the lime juice and sprinkle in the rest of the
  seasonings, stirring and tasting as you go. Crumble in a few piquins or
  other fiery chilis to bring the heat up to taste. However, do not try to
  adjust the seasoning to perfection right now; it's easy to ruin a chili by
  correcting the flavors too soon -- the long cooking will smooth and sweeten
  it.
  
  Lower the heat to as low as possible. If the pot is left to boil, the meat
  will toughen. Every half hour or so after the first hour, taste for
  seasoning, adjusting and thickening with the masa harina a teaspoonful at a
  time. The chili should be about ready to eat in three hours, although it
  will benefit from a night's ageing in the refrigerator.
  
  Serve it simmering in large, heavy bowls with an ample supply of soda
  crackers and a side of beans, but not much else except, maybe, hot, black
  coffee or quart-sized glasses of iced tea or a few frosty bottles of your
  favorite beer. And, after a good long while, push things aside, lean back
  in your chair, and start arguing.
 

 

Oriental Short Rib Barbecue
 
    2/3 c  Green onions, thinly              1/4 c  Dark roasted sesame oil
           -sliced                         2 1/2 tb Brown sugar, packed
  1 1/2 tb Toasted sesame seeds,             1/2 ts Red pepper, ground
           -crushed                          1/8 ts Red pepper pods, crushed
      1 c  Each soy sauce and water            4    Ibs  beef short ribs, *
      1 tb Each minced garlic and                   -well trimmed
           -grated fresh ginger           
 
  Combine green onions, soy sauce, water, sesame oil, brown sugar, sesame
  seeds, garlic, ginger, red pepper and red pepper pods. Place short ribs in
  a plastic bag; add marinade, turning to coat. Close bag securely, and
  marinate in refrigerator 4-6 hours (or overnight, if desired), turning
  occasionally. Remove ribs from marinade; reserve marinade. Place ribs on
  grid over medium coals, cover. Grill 10-12 minutes, turning once and
  brushing with marinade before serving. Makes 12 servings.
  
  *Short ribs can be ordered from retailers. They are cut 3/8- to 1/2 inch
  thick. Each has three cross-cut rib bones.
  
  From the files of Al Rice, North Pole Alaska.    Feb 1994
 



Oriental Short Rib Barbeque-Uldrich
 
      4 lb Beef short ribs; *                  1 ts Garlic; crushed
    2/3 c  Green onions; thinly sliced         1 tb Fresh ginger; grated
    1/2 c  Soy sauce                         1/2 ts Ground red pepper
    1/2 c  Water                             1/8 ts Fresh ground Szechuan pepper
    1/4 c  Dark-roasted sesame oil                  Fresh mild red chili peppers
  2 1/2 tb Brown sugar; packed                      Green onions
  1 1/2 tb Sesame seeds; toasted,                   Radish rose
           -crushed                       
 
  * Trim the beef short ribs and cut no more than 3/8 to 1/2" thick.
  NOTE FROM JOHN ULDRICH: "This is a Blue Ribbon Winner created by a friend
  and cook-off competitor--John Michels. He won the outdoor division and
  Grand Champion award with this dish in the 1988 National Beef Cook-off -- a
  $15,000 entry!" Combine sliced green onions, soy sauce, water, sesame oil,
  brown sugar, sesame seeds, garlic, ginger, red pepper and Szechuan
  peppercorns. Place beef short ribs and marinade in plastic bag or utility
  dish, turning to coat. Close bag securely or cover dish and marinate in
  refrigerator 4 to 6 hours, turning occasionally.

  Remove ribs from marinade; reserve marinade. Place ribs on grill over
  medium coals. Broil 5 to 6 minutes. Turn ribs over; brush or spoon on
  marinade. Cover and continue cooking 5 to 6 minutes or until desired degree
  of doneness. Place ribs on platter; garnish with chili peppers, green
  onions and radish rose.
  From: Blue Ribbon BBQ by John Uldrich.
 



Peppered Rib Eye Steaks
 
      4    Beef rib eye steaks;            1 1/2 ts Pepper
           -1 1/2 inches thick                 1 ts Salt
      1 tb Olive oil                           1 ts Lemon pepper
      1 tb Garlic powder                       1 ts Red pepper; ground
      1 tb Paprika                                  Orange slices; optional
      2 ts Thyme; dried ground                      Parsley sprigs; optional
      2 ts Oregano; dried ground          
 
  Brush steaks lightly with olive oil.  In a small bowl, combine all
  seasonings.  Sprinkle seasoning over steaks and press in both sides. cover
  and chill for 1 hour. Grill steaks, turning once, over medium-hot coals
  14-18 minutes for rare; 18-22 minutes for medium; 24-38 minutes for well
  done. Place on a warm serving platter; cut across the grain into thick
  slices. Garnish with orange slices and parsley if desired.
 



Red's Barbecued Brisket
  
     10 lb Beef brisket                   
 
  Recipe by: Chile Pepper Magazine - Sep/Oct 1990 Most barbecue in Texas
  revolves around beef, and more specifically, brisket. When you select your
  brisket, choose only "packer trimmed" briskets in the ten to twelve pound
  category. The smaller briskets don't have enough fat to tenderize them,
  and the larger ones could have come off of a tough old range bull that no
  amount of cooking will ever tenderize. Avoid closely trimmed or "value
  packed" brisket pieces. The fat that was cut off to make 'em pretty is the
  very stuff that would have made them tender! All briskets have a fat cover
  on one side. Ignore this! Squeeze the thick end with both thumbs. When
  you've found the brisket with the smallest fat kernel, that's the one for
  you. Take it home and build your fire. While your fire is getting going--I
  build mine out of a mixture of mesquite and oak--rub your brisket with a
  dry "rub." [See Red's Dry Rub recipe] Make sure that the meat is thoroughly
  coated. This helps seal the meat, and adds a flavorful crust.
  
  Thoroughly coat all surfaces of the brisket with lemon juice, and rub in
  well. Sprinkle dry rub generously all over the brisket, rubbing in well.
  Make sure that the brisket is entirely covered.
  
  When the wood has burned down, move the coals to one side of the pit, place
  the meat away from the direct heat, fat side up (let gravity and nature do
  the basting), and close the pit. Some people add a pan of water near the
  coals to provide added moisture, but I don't. Now, don't touch the meat for
  12 hours. Just drink a few beers, cook a pot of beans, and tend your fire.
  You'd like to hold the cooking temperature around 210 degrees F. in the
  brisket cooking area. Since "helpers" usually show up at the first whiff of
  smoke, you probably ought to put some of your leftover rub on a couple of
  racks of pork ribs and toss them on the pit, in the hotter end, and baste
  and turn 'em for four and five hours, just to keep the animals at bay.
  Meanwhile, see Red's Prize Winnin' Pintos recipe to keep you busy.
  
  Back at the pit, after the twelve hours are completed, generously slather
  the brisket with a basting sauce (not a barbecue sauce), wrap it tightly in
  aluminum foil, and return to the pit. [See Red's Basting Sauce recipe]
  Close off all of the air supplies to the fire, and allow the meat to "set"
  in the pit for three or four hours. This really tenderizes the meat. Serve
  your brisket with beans, cole slaw, Jalepenos, onions, pickles, and plenty
  of bread. Cold beer or iced tea are the traditional beverages of choice.
  
  You'll find that a ten-pound brisket will yield about 8-16 servings,
  depending on the individual brisket, and the size of the appetites of the
  guests.
 



Texas Barbecued Beef Brisket #1
 
     10 lb Beef brisket                        2 c  Basic All-American BBQ sauce
      2 c  All-south barbecue rub; see    
 
  Recipe by: The Thrill of the Grill by Chris Schlesinger 1. Rub the brisket
  thoroughly on all its sides with the barbecue rub, and allow it to come to
  room temperature.
  
  2. In the pit of a covered grill, build a very small fire on one side as
  far up against one wall as possible. Place the brisket on the grill on the
  side opposite from the fire so that none of the brisket is directly over
  the flame. Put the top on the cooker, pull up a chair, and grab the cooler.
  
  This is where a person learns about the Zen of Barbecue. You gotta keep the
  fire going, but very quietly. If you've got a thermometer on your covered
  grill, you want to keep the temperature between 180 and 220 F. Remember, "Slow
  and low is the way to go." You have to figure out your own personal
  refueling policy. The one I like is one handful of coals or wood chunks to
  every beer.
  
  This goes on for about 8 to 10 hours or however long you can make it, the
  longer the better. Don't be scared by the darkening of the exterior, the
  outside of the brisket will be superdark--my personal favorite part.
  
  3. Upon completion, pull the brisket out, trim off any excess fat, and
  slice it thin. Serve with barbecue sauce on the side--no pro would ever
  cover properly cooked brisket with sauce, he'd just dab on a touch.
  
  Obviously the key here is a tremendous amount of patience and a day when
  you want to do nothing but sit around. But the end product is one of those
  great culinary events that results from spending a lot of time doing
  something that is relaxing and enjoyable. Make sure you have plenty of tall
  boys for eating this.
 



Texas Barbequed Beef Brisket #2
 
      1 ea Boneless beef brisket (6 to         1 ea Medium onion, grated
           - 8 pounds)                     1 1/2 c  Catsup
      2 ts Paprika                             1 tb Fresh lemon juice
      1 ts Ground black pepper, divided        1 tb Worcestershire sauce
      1 tb Butter                              1 ts Hot pepper sauce
 
  Trim external fat on beef brisket to 1/4 inch.  Combine paprika and 1/2 tsp
  of the black pepper; rub evenly over surface of beef brisket. Place
  brisket, fat side down, in 11 1/2 X 9" disposable foil pan. Add 1 cup
  water.  Cover pan tightly with aluminum foil. Place in center of grid over
  very low coals (use a single layer of coals with space in between each);
  cover cooker.  Cook 5 - 6 hours, turning brisket over every 1 1/2 hours;
  use baster to remove fat from pan as it accumulates. Add 1/2 cup water, if
  needed, to pan during cooking. (Add just enough briquette during cooking to
  keep coals at a very low temperature). Remove brisket from pan; place on
  grid, fat side down, directly over very low coals. Reserve pan dripping.
  Cover; continue cooking for 30 minutes to 1 hour.
  
  Meanwhile, skim fat from pan drippings; reserve 1 cup drippings. Melt
  butter in medium saucepan over medium heat. Add onion; cook until tender
  crisp.  Add reserved pan drippings, remaining 1/2 teaspoon black pepper,
  the catsup, lemon juice, Worcestershire sauce and hot pepper sauce; simmer
  15 minutes.
  
  Carve brisket into thin slices across the grain; serve with sauce. Garnish
  with fresh peppers and lemon and lime slices.
  
  Note:  For a smokier flavor, soak oak, pecan, mesquite or hickory chips in
  water 30 minutes and add to very low coals.
  
  Source:  National Live Stock and Meat Board. By Carey Starzinger
   on Sep 24, 1996
 


Texas Beef Barbecue #1
 
  3 1/2 lb Beef Brisket; In 1 Piece            2    Cloves Garlic; Minced
      1 c  Catsup                              1 md Fresh Or Canned Green Chile
    1/2 c  Cider Vinegar                            Seeded And Minced; OR
    1/4 c  Worcestershire Sauce                2 ts Chili Powder
    1/4 c  (1/2 Cube) Butter                   1 ts Paprika
      3    Ribs Celery; Finely Chopped       1/2 ts Salt
      1 md Onion; Finely Chopped             1/2 ts Freshly Ground Black Pepper
 
  When the fire has burned down to hot coals, spread to provide moderate heat
  and fit a drip pan in front of in the center of the coals. Place the
  brisket, fat side up, over the drip pan. Cover the grill and adjust the
  dampers to maintain slow steady heat. While the meat is cooking, in a sauce
  pan combine all of the other ingredients, blending well, and simmer for 10
  minutes.  After 1 hour, baste the meat lightly with the sauce and turn the
  meat as needed to cook evenly. Replenish the fire as needed, but don't pile
  the coals, as the brisket should cook slowly.  Cook 4 to 5 hours total
  until the meat almost falls apart. Sprinkle 2 to 3 handfuls of hickory
  chips, that have been soaked in water, over the coals. Cover the grill or
  enclose the top of the meat in a sheet of foil, tucked around the bottom
  edges of the meat and let the hickory smoke the meat for 10 to 15 minutes.
  Remove the cover and brush the meat with the sauce. Place the meat on a
  platter and slice.  It will crumble. Serve the meat and the remaining sauce
  on split and buttered sandwich buns. Any leftover sandwiches can be frozen
  and reheated in a Microwave or conventional oven, or the shredded meat and
  sauce can be frozen together to reheat later for sandwiches.
 


Texas Beef Barbeque #2
 
      6 lb Beef brisket                        3    Bay leaves
      2 qt Bone stock                               Salt and pepper
 
  Recipe by: Walter Jetton Put the bay leaves in a about a cup of water and
  bring to a boil.  Let it simmer 10 minutes or so, then remove the leaves
  and add the bay tea to the bone stock, along with the salt and pepper. Put
  the brisket in your Dutch Oven and add the stock mixture to cover it about
  a quarter of the way. Cover and cook over the fire, turning the brisket
  about every half hour until it's nearly done. This can be determined by
  forking.  Mop it and lay it on the grill to finish cooking, being sure to
  turn it and mop it every 20 minutes or so. To make a good natural gravy,
  add a little Worcestershire Sauce and maybe a dash of chili powder to the
  liquid you cooked the brisket in. You can also serve this with barbecue
  sauce.

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