Beginner's Brisket Guide Cover Photo

Simple Smoked Brisket Recipe on the Weber Smokey Mountain

Smoked Brisket on the Weber Smokey Mountain (Simple, Classic, No Sauce Needed)

If you've ever been intimidated by smoking a brisket, don't be.

A good brisket doesn't need complicated injections, fancy wrapping techniques, or a dozen different seasonings. Sometimes the best barbecue comes from quality beef, a steady fire, and a little patience.

This week I smoked a 7-pound brisket from a locally butchered beef on my 18-inch Weber Smokey Mountain, and it turned out exactly how brisket should: tender, juicy, and packed with beefy flavor. It didn't need barbecue sauce—it stood on its own.

Here's exactly how I cooked it.

Works on Any Smoker: This recipe was made on an 18-inch Weber Smokey Mountain, but the same process works on pellet grills, kettle grills, offset smokers, ceramic cookers, and electric smokers. The key isn't the cooker—it's maintaining 225–250°F and cooking until the brisket is probe tender.

Sliced Brisket

Why I Love Smaller Briskets

Everyone talks about the massive 15-18 pound packer briskets you see in competitions.

The reality?

Most backyard cooks don't need that much meat.

A 6-8 pound brisket is much easier to manage, cooks faster, and is perfect for feeding family and friends without spending 14-16 hours tending a smoker.

This cook finished in about 7 hours, making it an ideal weekend project.


How to Trim a Brisket

One of the biggest mistakes people make is not trimming enough fat.

Fat adds flavor while it renders, but thick, hard fat won't melt during the cook. Instead, it blocks smoke and seasoning from reaching the meat.

Here's how I trim mine:

  • Remove any hard chunks of fat.
  • Trim the fat cap down to about ¼ inch thick.
  • Round off thin edges that may burn.
  • Remove loose pieces of meat or fat hanging from the brisket.

For this cook, I trimmed about one pound of fat from the brisket before seasoning.

Don't worry about making it competition-perfect. You're simply creating an even surface so the brisket cooks consistently.

Trimmed and Seasoned Brisket

The Seasoning

Sometimes simple wins.

I generously coated the brisket with Burn Pit BBQ Ground Pounder Garlic Seasoning, making sure every side was covered.

After seasoning, I wrapped the brisket tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerated it overnight.

Giving the seasoning time to work into the meat helps build flavor before the brisket ever hits the smoker.


Smoking on the Weber Smokey Mountain

For this cook I used my 18-inch Weber Smokey Mountain, one of my favorite smokers because it's reliable and easy to run.

Fire Setup

  • Minion Method - 

    The Minion Method is one of the easiest ways to maintain a long, steady fire in a charcoal smoker without constantly adding fuel.

    Instead of lighting an entire chimney of charcoal, you fill the charcoal ring with unlit briquettes, then pour a small amount of lit charcoal on top. As those hot coals burn, they slowly ignite the surrounding unlit charcoal, creating a controlled burn that can last for hours.

  • Charcoal briquettes
  • Hickory wood chips
  • Water pan filled with beer
  • Cooking temperature: 225–250°F

The Minion Method allows the fire to burn slowly and consistently for hours without constantly adding charcoal.

The beer in the water pan helps maintain moisture and stabilize temperatures throughout the cook.

Minion Method on weber smokey mountain grill

Cooking the Brisket

Place the brisket on the smoker once it's running steadily between 225-250°F.

From there, leave it alone.

Avoid opening the lid every 20 minutes. Every peek lets heat escape and adds unnecessary cooking time.

Instead, trust your smoker and let the brisket do its thing.

Rather than cooking to a specific internal temperature, cook until the probe slides into the meat with very little resistance, almost like inserting it into warm butter.

For this brisket, that happened at approximately 7 hours.

Every brisket is different, so tenderness, not temperature, is the finish line.

Brisket on the weber smokey mountain grill

Rest Before Slicing

Once the brisket is probe tender, remove it from the smoker and allow it to rest before slicing.

Resting gives the juices time to redistribute throughout the meat, making every slice more tender and flavorful.

Slice against the grain into pencil-thick slices and serve immediately.


The Best Part

The finished brisket was exactly what great barbecue should be.

Tender.

Juicy.

Rich beef flavor.

Just enough smoke.

And honestly...

No barbecue sauce needed.

When the meat is cooked right, the brisket speaks for itself.

sliced brisket

Smoked Brisket Recipe

Ingredients

Equipment

  • 18-inch Weber Smokey Mountain
  • Instant-read thermometer or temperature probe
  • Sharp slicing knife

Instructions

  1. Trim approximately 1 pound of fat from the brisket, leaving about ¼ inch of fat on the fat cap.
  2. Season generously with Burn Pit BBQ Ground Pounder Garlic Seasoning.
  3. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.
  4. Prepare the Weber Smokey Mountain using the Minion Method.
  5. Fill the water pan with beer.
  6. Add hickory wood chips to the charcoal.
  7. Stabilize the smoker between 225–250°F.
  8. Smoke the brisket until it is probe tender, approximately 7 hours.
  9. Remove from the smoker and allow it to rest.
  10. Slice against the grain and serve.

No sauce required.


Tips for Success

  • Trim hard fat—don't leave thick chunks that won't render.
  • Season the night before for deeper flavor.
  • Keep the smoker closed as much as possible.
  • Cook until probe tender, not to a specific time.
  • Let the brisket rest before slicing.
  • Slice against the grain for the most tender bite.

Smoked Brisket FAQ

What temperature should I smoke a brisket?

For this recipe, keep your smoker between 225°F and 250°F. This temperature range allows the fat and connective tissue to slowly render, creating a tender brisket without drying it out.

Don't chase every small temperature swing. A smoker naturally fluctuates, and being within this range is perfectly normal.


What internal temperature is brisket done?

Don't cook brisket to a specific temperature—cook it until it's probe tender.

Most briskets become tender somewhere between 195°F and 205°F, but every piece of meat is different.

The best test is inserting a temperature probe into the thickest part of the brisket. When it slides in with very little resistance, like pushing into room-temperature butter, it's ready to come off the smoker.


What is "the stall"?

The stall is the point during the cook when the brisket's internal temperature stops rising, usually between 150°F and 170°F.

This happens because moisture evaporating from the meat cools the surface at nearly the same rate the smoker is heating it—similar to how sweating cools your body.

The stall can last anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours, depending on the size of the brisket and your smoker.

Don't panic—it's completely normal.


Should I wrap my brisket?

You have two good options.

Leave it unwrapped

  • Better bark
  • Richer smoke flavor
  • Longer cook time

Wrap it

  • Speeds up the cook
  • Helps retain moisture
  • Softens the bark slightly

For this cook, I left the brisket unwrapped the entire time, and it turned out tender with a beautiful bark.

If you're short on time, wrap the brisket in butcher paper or aluminum foil once it reaches the stall (around 160°F).


Should I use butcher paper or foil?

Both work well, but they produce different results.

Pink butcher paper

  • Preserves the bark better
  • Allows some moisture to escape
  • Popular among Texas-style barbecue cooks

Aluminum foil

  • Cooks faster
  • Retains the most moisture
  • Produces a softer bark

If it's your first brisket, either option will work. The most important thing is cooking until the brisket is tender.


How long does it take to smoke a brisket?

Cooking time depends on the size of the brisket and your smoker.

As a general guide:

Brisket Size Approximate Cook Time at 225–250°F
5–6 pounds 5–6 hours
7–8 pounds 6–8 hours
10–12 pounds 9–12 hours
14–16 pounds 12–16 hours

Remember: cook to tenderness, not the clock.


Do I need to spritz the brisket?

No.

Many pitmasters spritz with water, apple juice, or beef broth, but it's not required.

Keeping the smoker closed allows it to maintain a stable cooking temperature. Opening the lid too often usually adds more cooking time than any benefit a spritz provides.


How long should I rest a brisket?

Rest the brisket for at least 30–60 minutes before slicing.

A longer rest (up to 2 hours in a cooler or insulated container) is even better for larger briskets.

Resting allows the juices to redistribute throughout the meat, giving you moister slices.


Do I slice with or against the grain?

Always slice against the grain.

Cutting across the muscle fibers shortens them, making each bite much more tender.

If you're unsure which direction the grain runs, take a look before seasoning and cooking—you can even make a small notch on one corner of the brisket as a reminder.


Can I freeze leftover brisket?

Absolutely.

Slice or portion the brisket, vacuum seal it (or wrap it tightly), and freeze for up to 3 months.

To reheat, thaw overnight in the refrigerator and warm gently in a covered pan or simmer the sealed bag in hot water. This helps keep the brisket moist without overcooking it.

Ready to Smoke Your First Brisket?

If this recipe gives you the confidence to fire up your smoker, we'd love to see how it turns out.

Tag @BurnPitBBQ on social media and show us your finished brisket—we regularly share cooks from our backyard barbecue community.

And if you're looking for more beginner-friendly recipes, grilling tips, and real-world barbecue advice, be sure to:

  • Subscribe to our weekly newsletter for new recipes delivered straight to your inbox.
  • Listen to the Grilling To Get Away podcast, where we talk barbecue, outdoor cooking, and the stories that happen around the grill.
  • Try our Ground Pounder Garlic Seasoning, the all-purpose blend we used on this brisket and one of our favorite seasonings for beef, chicken, pork, vegetables, and more.

Remember, great barbecue isn't about expensive equipment or complicated techniques—it's about gathering around the fire with family and friends, enjoying the process, and making memories one cook at a time.

We'll see you around the pit. 🔥

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