The correct way to react to most miscommunication. And awfully rare.
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I wouldn't think brisket would be good rare
It's not. Brisket is definitely one of those dishes that is very unforgiving of cooking time. The only thing worse than raw brisket is burned brisket.
Likely language barrier thing here. I thought first that I had never once tried "brisket", and I'm 40 y/o. I look up what it is, and it's a cut of meat, rather than a recipe. So the person here then heard "make a dish out of brisket, with a sauce made with gravy", or?
Brisket, as far as my personal experience with it has been, is a southern usa barbeque recipe. It's a way of slow cooking beef, and not necessarily a specific shape.
You take your brisket sauce of choice, you soak a cut of beef, specifically from the cow’s breast or lower chest. In southern grocery stores it's literally labeled 'brisket'. You soak the meat in a cooking pot full of the sauce, and cook it in the oven for several hours. Afterwards, you can slice it, shred it, or whatever to your hearts content.
The slow cooking means that the meat flavor is thoroughly mixed with the sauce flavor. The specific cut of meat and slow cooking also means that, so long as you got the timing and temperature right, your brisket is incredibly soft to eat. Done right, it is also incredibly moist. Badly done brisket is incredibly dry. A lot of chain resturaunts will try to hide this with ass loads of BBQ sauce, but you can always tell.
I usually see brisket served with more barbeque sauce (usually a mix of ketchup, brown sugar and vinegar) but using a gravy instead would not be out of the realm of possibility.
In this case, brisket and gravy, although not common, would be a pretty great test of your cooking skill. Getting the brisket right, and then choosing a gravy that enhances, rather than hides or overwhelms the built-in brisket flavors would actually be a pretty great challenge.
***Edit To answer your actual question, the guy missheard "brisket" when the TV host actually said "biscuit". Very easy to mess up, especially as non-native English speaker.
Brisket is the "chest" of beef - the underside between the front legs. It's fatty and full of sinew which makes it great for slow cooking.
Brisket is a specific cut because that cut is well suited to slow cooking and not a lot else.
Honestly I'd rather have brisket and gravy.
I firmly disagree. A good Biscuits and Gravy is the perfect breakfast food. I am part of a Brunch Bunch and have had hundreds of different Biscuits and Gravy. It's my go to dish for judging a restaurant.
There's a breakfast place near me that has absolutely phenomenal gravy, but shitty store bought biscuits. I too, love biscuits and gravy, and I like their gravy but hate their biscuits, so what's a man to do? Sourdough toast and gravy, my friend! I've actually come to prefer sourdough toast and gravy over biscuits and gravy most of the time, unless the place has amazing biscuits.
Third option: brisket and gravy on biscuits.
I want brisket on a biscuit with gravy.
Brisket and gravy looks yum. Don’t see the problem here.
Our society is so wasteful and entitled if we’re getting pissy at this level.
Can you imagine being the chef who went home in that round, though?
I might not agree with Alton Brown on all the opinions I’ve seen him post, but I have the impression that he’s someone who’s trying in general not to make things harder than they need to be (except of course when that’s exactly what the challenge is in the game that everyone signed up to play, what with all the wacky sabotage options on Cutthroat Kitchen).
Can you imagine being the chef who went home in that round, though?
You mean, if I lost to somebody who managed to make decent brisket in half an hour?
I mean, if he went home his biscuit and gravy weren't amazing I guess.
No way in fuck is anyone cooking a brisket in under 6 hours without it being inedibly chewy.
Do you have a moment to discuss our lord and savior the pressure cooker?
It's possible, but it comes out more like a pot roast in my opinion. The fastest brisket I've ever completed to satisfaction was 2 hours for I think an 8-10lb brisket at like 300 in a green egg. It wasn't planned, the fire just got away from me but it came out like 87% as good as a true low and low brisket.
I imagine he cooked only a small part of it in a pressure cooker it might work.
Pressure cookers (and their scary cousin the pressure fryer) are kitchen witchcraft.
He made a brisket in the time it takes to make biscuits and gravy? I don’t think so.
A pressure cooker can work wonders.
Even then, it would take that long to prep and heat up to pressure.