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Estimated Smoking Time
12.5 hr
सूत्र
## How Smoking Time Is Estimated ### Formula **Total Time = Rate (hr/lb) x Weight (lbs) x (250 / Smoker Temp)** ### Smoking Rates at 250°F | Meat | Rate | Target Internal | |------|------|----------------| | Brisket | 1-1.5 hr/lb | 200-205°F | | Pork Shoulder | 1.5-2 hr/lb | 203-205°F | | Ribs (rack) | 5-6 hours total | 195-203°F | | Whole Chicken | 3-4 hours total | 165°F | | Turkey | 0.5 hr/lb | 165°F | ### The Stall Large cuts (brisket, pork shoulder) often stall at 150-170°F as moisture evaporates and cools the surface. This can last hours. Wrapping in butcher paper or foil (the Texas crutch) pushes through the stall faster.
हल किया गया उदाहरण
Smoke a 10 lb brisket at 250°F.
- 01Rate for brisket = 1.25 hr/lb.
- 02Temp factor = 250 / 250 = 1.
- 03Total time = 1.25 x 10 x 1 = 12.5 hours.
- 04Target internal temperature = 203°F.
- 05Rest time after removing from smoker = 60 minutes.
- 06Total time including rest = 13.5 hours. Start early!
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न
Should I smoke at 225 or 250°F?
Both work. 225°F is traditional and produces more smoke flavor with a longer cook. 250°F is slightly faster with very similar results. Some pitmasters go as high as 275°F for brisket.
What is the Texas crutch?
Wrapping meat in foil or butcher paper during the stall (150-170°F) to push through faster. Foil produces a softer bark; butcher paper preserves more bark texture while still speeding the cook.
How do I know when it is done?
Use a probe thermometer. The target temperature matters more than time. For brisket and pork shoulder, the meat should feel like probing room-temperature butter when the probe slides in easily.
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