There's a moment every pitmaster chases: that first slice through a brisket flat that bends, glistens, and holds together without falling apart in your hand. This Beef Tallow Smoked Brisket is built entirely around that moment. By injecting and coating a whole packer prime with rich beef tallow before it ever sees smoke, we're loading the meat with insurance against dryness, then letting a steady 225°F fire do the patient work of rendering fat and building bark over the long haul.
What You’ll Love About This Recipe
- Tallow injection keeps the flat moist through a 16-hour cook
- Foil boat method builds deep bark without steaming it soft
- Rich, beefy flavor from the inside out
- Serves 15 — built for game day, holidays, and big gatherings
- Patient low-and-slow technique with a foolproof finish
- Competition-quality results from a backyard pellet grill
Beef Tallow Smoked Brisket
Tom Jackson
Rated 4.1 stars by 36 users
Category
Entree
Cuisine
American
Servings
15
Prep Time
45 minutes
Cook Time
16 hours
Calories
324
What sets this cook apart is the foil boat method on the back half. Instead of fully wrapping and steaming away that hard-earned crust, we cradle the brisket in a tallow-lined butcher paper bundle, then float it in an open foil boat so the top stays exposed to the smoker's heat. The result is the best of both worlds: a flat that stays moisture-rich while the bark continues to set and darken right up to the finish line.
Ingredients
-
1 Creekstone Farms Whole Packer Prime Brisket
-
1 cup beef tallow, divided
-
1 tbsp Cattleman’s Grill Butcher House Brine
-
Cattleman’s Grill Trail Dust AP Seasoning
Directions
Remove the fat cap completely from the point, leave a 1/4" cap on the flat, and shave off any large chunks of hard surface fat so smoke and seasoning reach the meat.
Combine 3/4 cup beef tallow with 1 tablespoon Cattleman's Grill Butcher House Brine in a small jar, shake well, then inject this seasoned tallow throughout the flat for built-in moisture.
Rub the excess tallow over the entire surface of the brisket, then season generously all over with Cattleman's Grill Trail Dust AP Seasoning.
Bring your pellet grill up to a steady 225°F. We used the Yoder Smokers YS640s Pellet Grill.
Place the brisket on the second shelf and smoke until a dark bark forms and the internal temperature hits roughly 165°F, about 12 hours.
Spread the remaining 1/4 cup beef tallow over butcher paper in the rough shape of the brisket, set the brisket on it, and wrap tightly.
Lay out a large sheet of foil, fold it over to double it, set the paper-wrapped brisket on top, and form a boat around the bottom while leaving the top of the butcher paper exposed.
Return the brisket to the smoker and cook until it's probe tender and roughly 205°F internal.
Move the brisket to a cooler or hot box and let it rest 1-2 hours before slicing for maximum juiciness.
Recipe Note
Recipe FAQ
Why inject brisket with beef tallow?
Injecting seasoned beef tallow directly into the flat solves the most common brisket problem: a lean, dry flat sitting next to a perfectly juicy point. Tallow carries fat and flavor into the deepest part of the meat, giving it built-in moisture insurance before the cook even starts. The Butcher House Brine in the injection adds seasoning from the inside out so the flat doesn't just look great — it tastes great all the way through.
What is the foil boat method?
The foil boat method is the middle ground between a full wrap and no wrap at all. Once the bark is set and the brisket hits around 165°F, it gets placed on tallow-coated butcher paper, wrapped, and then set into an open boat of doubled foil that cradles the bottom while leaving the top completely exposed to the smoker. The result: the flat stays moist because it's no longer losing moisture to evaporation, but the bark keeps darkening and tightening because it's still sitting in live heat. A full Texas crutch wrap would steam the bark soft — the foil boat doesn't.
What internal temperature should smoked brisket reach?
Smoke unwrapped until the brisket hits around 165°F and a dark, firm bark has formed across the surface. After the foil boat wrap, continue cooking until the brisket is probe tender at roughly 205°F. Temperature is a guideline — the real test is when your probe slides into the thickest part of the flat with little to no resistance, like pushing into room-temperature butter. That feel matters more than the number.
Why rest brisket for 2 hours?
During a long cook the muscle fibers contract and squeeze moisture toward the center of the meat. Resting in a cooler or hot box for 2 hours gives those fibers time to relax and reabsorb the juices that have pooled. Slice too soon and those juices run out onto the cutting board instead of staying in the meat. The rest is what separates a moist slice from a dry one — it's not optional on a 16-hour brisket.
Can I cook this Indoors?
We rate this a 1 out of 5 for cooking indoors. Best cooked on the grill — indoor cooking not advised. This recipe requires a pellet smoker running at 225°F for up to 16 hours. The smoke exposure, sustained low heat, and foil boat technique are all designed around the smoker environment and cannot be replicated indoors.
Recipe Highlights & Insights
The tallow injection is what separates this recipe from a standard smoked brisket. The flat is the leanest, most vulnerable part of a whole packer — it's the part that dries out on lesser cooks. Injecting seasoned tallow directly into the flat adds fat where the meat can't make it on its own, effectively moisture-proofing the flat from the inside before the 16-hour cook even begins.
The foil boat is a technique refinement that matters. A full Texas crutch wrap stops bark development the moment you seal it — the steam inside softens everything the fire built. The foil boat cradles the bottom to prevent moisture loss from below while leaving the top open to the smoker, so the bark keeps setting and darkening right through to the finish line. It's the best of both approaches without the trade-off of either.
Probe tenderness is the real finish line, not temperature. 205°F is a guide, not a rule — some briskets are done at 200°F, others need 210°F depending on the grade, the thickness of the flat, and how the cook has gone. Slide your probe into the thickest part of the flat: when it meets no resistance, like pushing through soft butter, the brisket is ready. Trust the feel over the number.
The 2-hour rest in a cooler or hot box is non-negotiable on a cook this long. This recipe serves 15, which means it's built for events — and the good news is the rest window gives you flexibility on timing. A well-insulated cooler will hold a brisket safely for 3–4 hours if needed, which means you can pull it early and serve on your schedule without sacrificing any quality.
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Nutrition
Nutrition
- Nutrition Serving Size
- 4 oz
- per serving
- Calories
- 324
- Carbs
- 7 grams
- Protein
- 20 grams
- Fat
- 13 grams
- Sodium
- 483 milligrams