Beef Brisket Rub
Beef Brisket Rub
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Reach for this rub when you are cooking a brisket low and slow and want a deep, dark, peppery bark without babysitting six different jars. It is built the way pitmasters build a great beef crust: Tellicherry black pepper and sea salt at the core, with onion, garlic, and the smoky, fruity warmth of ancho and chipotle peppers behind them. Coat the meat, smoke it, and it sets into a savory, mahogany bark. It is just as good on chuck roast, beef ribs, tri-tip, and homemade pastrami.
Two choices make it work. There is no sugar in it, so it will not scorch into bitterness over a twelve-hour smoke the way sweet commercial rubs do. And it is ground coarse on purpose, because coarse pepper and seed give smoke something to cling to, building real bark instead of dissolving into a paste. We stone-grind it fresh and keep that texture deliberately rugged.
Stone-ground, packed fresh. Contains sea salt. No sugar or fillers.
Common Questions
How much should I use, and do I need to add salt?
How much should I use, and do I need to add salt?
No extra salt needed, since sea salt is already in the blend. Apply it generously and evenly, pressing it onto all sides of the meat, then let it sit before cooking. A good rule for brisket is a visible, even coat that just covers the surface; because the salt is built in, you are seasoning and salting in one step.
Why is it ground coarse instead of fine?
Why is it ground coarse instead of fine?
Bark. Coarse pepper and seed create the rough, textured surface that smoke and rendered fat cling to, which is what builds a thick, craggy crust. Fine powder dissolves into the meat's moisture and forms a paste that actually blocks smoke. The coarse grind here is doing real work.
Will it burn or turn bitter over a long smoke?
Will it burn or turn bitter over a long smoke?
It should not, because there is no sugar in it. Sweet rubs scorch into an acrid, bitter crust over the long hours a brisket needs. This blend leans on pepper, chiles, onion, and garlic instead, so it deepens rather than burns across a low-and-slow cook.
Do I need a binder like mustard first?
Do I need a binder like mustard first?
Optional. A thin layer of yellow mustard or a splash of Worcestershire helps the rub stick and cooks away to nothing flavor-wise, purely structural. On a well-trimmed, slightly damp surface the rub will adhere fine on its own. Either way, apply the rub right after.
What besides brisket is it good on?
What besides brisket is it good on?
It shines on big beef cuts generally: chuck roast (often called poor man's brisket), beef back ribs and plate ribs, and tri-tip. With its pepper-and-mustard-seed backbone it is also a natural for a pastrami-style crust on cured beef.
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Ingredients:
Beef Brisket Rub
$12.00