I had a large piece of chuck roast and was aching to get into the smoker. In my night time wanderings around the apartment, I decided that I would smoke the beef the next day, well, actually, later that same day. I prepped the meat by seasoning with a mix of equal parts salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder. Put the hunk of meat in a sealable bag and put into the fridge for the night.
By 9:00 I was setting up the smoker for 220°F, high smoke, and by 9:30 the roast was in the smoker. I was hoping that it would be done by dinner time. You can never tell how long these things will take.
By 3:30, I had reached the stall of 155 - 165° and I wrapped the roast in butcher paper and returned to the smoker. I had to leave the house by 4:15, so I started the oven at 225° and went out to the smoker at around 4 to put the meat in the oven to finish up going to 200°F.
I got home around 7 and quickly pulled the meat, sliced it in half, and then turned the cut side down to cut against the grain. Sometimes in these chuck roasts the grain is wacky and it is easier to cut it when you halve it. It's a trick I learned from J. Kenji Lopez-Alt in his treatise on smoking chuck.
I served this with left over roasted veggies from the merguez sheetpan dinner and a new trick of mashed rice-potatoes. I had made congee earlier in the week with left over rice from take out by putting the rice in the Instant Pot with a quart of chicken stock, a 2 in chunk of peeled ginger and a very large clove of garlic. Both were kept whole for easier fishing out at the end. Set the IP on the porridge setting and what came out was a very soft mass of flavorful rice. I took this out of the fridge and used an ice cream scooper to take out several balls of this rice-potato mash and heated in the microwave. The texture really is much like mashed potatoes, the flavor is not rice-y, a new and wonderful starch on the plate.
The meat was so moist, gravy was unnecessary and frankly, unwarranted. The meal was very satisfying and delicious. Drank a lovely Riserva Chianti with it. Cheers!
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