I'm assuming the flat is mainly the smaller section. I'm glad you said not to sauce it, everything I can recall uses a sauce, which will be available. I've been loving the Kinder stuff, sauces and rubs for beef and steaks! Cowboy Butter rub is great, as is the Smoked Garlic rub (I haven't seen this in a while though).I'm at the Hotel Bellwether in bellingham! If a server comes back and says "uhhh ben, flybill???? Is here?" I'll hook you right up.
My BBQ restaurant was called burnt ends, and I'll give you my procedure there. Some are going to call this sacrilegious, and it might well be.
When the flat is done, and everything is well rested, remove the entire point muscle from the flat. It should still be hot enough to require 2-3 layers of gloves, but with the flat pointing towards you, slide your hands underneath the point muscle at the back end of the brisket and slide them towards you. The whole point should come off easily without a knife. If it doesn't, you rushed the rest most likely.
Take that point muscle and put it back in the smoker at 325 for an hour or until it's crispy. Smoke if you want. The goal is to make the outer fat get a chicharon type texture where it puffs out, and the meat is nearly too tender to handle as a whole.
Slice that into cubes and don't you dare let any sauce near it. Crispy liquid meat. If you nailed it you're gonna know. If you don't know, you didn't.
I've got a foil pan ready to go and will make it the last thing, or do it when I get home from the river tomorrow. Most likely my dinner, but I do want to share them if I have time after the brisket is done and well rested. I've got my cooler ready to go and paper to wrap it up as well! Game on! Thanks for the tips!
I'll plan a trip up in the next week or two.. I used to wade the tidal flats in Birch Bay as a kid and catch dungies with mom, dad and sis and camp up there! It's been too long! I did do the same thing up at Ala a number of years ago.. so easy and fun.. we fished for SRC's as well!
Cheers!




