Once you wrap a brisket, the cook no longer follows a predictable timeline. Cook time after wrapping depends on temperature, meat size, fat content, climate and altitude.
Wrapping speeds things up, but exactly how much varies from brisket to brisket.
This guide is part of my Ultimate Brisket Guide.
General cooking timelines after wrapping
As a baseline:
- A whole 11-13 lb packer cooked at 225F usually needs about 3 hours after wrapping.
- A brisket flat cooked hotter (300F) often finishes in about 2 hours after wrapping.
- Foil magnifies the speed difference, while butcher paper is more moderate.
But these are just averages. Briskets can finish an hour earlier or later depending on:
- Grill efficiency
- Wind, cold or dry climates
- The grade of the meat
- Wrap type (foil vs butcher paper)
Cook to tenderness, not time
One of the most important things you can learn from a pitmaster is:
Keep cooking until the meat reaches its ideal final internal temperature and probes like butter.
For brisket, that’s usually 203-210F, but that can depend on the grade of brisket and your altitude. Lower grade briskets finish at lower temperatures; whereas briskets with lots of intramuscular fat need to cook longer to fully render that fat.
Altitude plays a big role too, because the boiling point of liquid is lower at higher elevations. If you’re at 10,000 feet and you try to cook a brisket to 210F degrees, it will end up very dry, even if you wrap it.
Find out the best temperature for your altitude: Brisket Done Temp Calculator
Use a reliable instant-read thermometer like the Thermapen One to check doneness. If the probe meets resistance, keep cooking, even if you’ve reached your estimated timeline.
“The craft of barbecue is all about mastering your environment, your meat and your fire and adapting to all three.”
— Pitmaster Christie Vanover
When to unwrap the Texas Crutch
Once your brisket hits its final temperature and is probe tender, don’t unwrap it yet. Let the meat rest while still wrapped. I usually hold briskets for 1-3 hours in a cooler without ice.
Resting is where the juices redistribute and the texture becomes melt-in-your-mouth tender.
If you unwrap too early, the bark can harden and the meat can cool too fast.
How to check temp through the wrap
You can safely monitor temps in two ways:
- Insert a leav-in probe through the foil or paper when you first wrap
- Use an instant-read thermometer near the end of the cook
Foil will pierce more easily. Paper will require a little more pressure. Just avoid puncturing the bottom of the wrap where juices can leak.
Christie’s Pitmaster Take
When someone asks me, “How long will it take after I wrap?” my honest answer is always: It depends, but you’ll know when it’s done. Time is a guideline. Tenderness is the truth.
If the brisket is wrapped and the probe slides in like warm butter, it’s ready, whether that takes one hour or three.
Brisket Guides
This BBQ Tip is part of my Ultimate Brisket Guide, which breaks down every step from anatomy to trimming to cooking.
Explore more brisket fundamentals:
For a full overview:
My Go-To Brisket Rub for Building Flavor and Bark
I use Girls Can Grill Brisket Rub on all of my briskets. This blend layers salt, pepper, garlic and savory spices to highlight the natural beef flavor while helping the bark develop evenly.
Trending Products
MASTER COOK 3 Burner BBQ Propane Ga...
SUNLIFER Charcoal Grill Offset Smok...
Realcook Charcoal BBQ Smoker Grill:...
Cocktail Smoker Kit with Torch – ...
Grilling Accessories, Grill Tools, ...
BBQ Grilling Tools Accessories Set ...
SHIZZO Grill Basket Set, Barbecue B...
Odoland 18pcs Camping Cookware Larg...
Dr. Camp 9 PCS Grilling Accessories...