low and slow smoked pulled pork. After many hours at low heat in a smoker, pork shoulder comes out silky, tender, with a crusty and crunchy bark, and ready for shredding into terrific pulled pork. Pulled pork, along with brisket, ribs and whole hog are the cornerstones of low and slow BBQ. Once you make your own pulled pork sandwich you will never visit another BBQ joint again.
The Slow 'N' Sear turns your grill into a first class smoker and also creates an extremely hot sear zone you can use to create steakhouse steaks. Learn how to smoke pulled pork shoulder on a Kamado-style grill or Big Green Egg with step-by-step instructions, including my family favorite pork shoulder dry rub recipe. To cook a pork shoulder low and slow on the barbecue and pull it into tender shredded meat, you'll need the following Love those Pulled Pork Sandwiches? You can cook low and slow smoked pulled pork using 20 ingredients and 12 steps. Here is how you cook it.
Ingredients of low and slow smoked pulled pork
- It's 10 lb of pork shoulder (Boston butt).
- It's 1 cup of prepared yellow mustard (your favorite).
- You need 4 medium of jalapeños.
- You need 2 medium of white or red onions.
- It's of rub.
- You need 1/2 cup of brown sugar.
- Prepare 1/4 cup of chipotle powder.
- You need 1/4 cup of black pepper.
- It's 2 tbsp of thyme.
- You need 2 tbsp of dried parsley.
- Prepare 2 tbsp of cinnamon.
- Prepare 1/4 cup of garlic salt or 1/8 cup salt and 1/8 garlic powder.
- Prepare 1/4 cup of ground coffee (i used this as well as making a coffee bbq but it can be left out).
- Prepare of coffee bbq sauce (if desired).
- It's 1 of bottle bbq (i used a spicier one, and i found a thicker sauce works better for this).
- It's 1 1/2 cup of brewed black coffee.
- You need 2 tbsp of warchestershire.
- You need 1/2 cup of brown sugar.
- Prepare 2 tbsp of cinnamon.
- You need 1 clove of garlic.
Try this easy to do recipe for real Barbecue Pulled Pork, all done on a simple backyard BBQ smoker. This beloved low-and-slow smoked meat is the perfect solution for feeding a large, hungry crowd. Pork shoulder is laced with flavorful fat and connective tissue that When it comes to pulled pork, it's actually easier to cook with the bone. Having a bone in the meat helps retain moisture and flavor.
low and slow smoked pulled pork instructions
- trim excess fat from pork (you can't and don't need to get it all) rinse thoroughly and pat dry with paper towels.
- lather mustard ask over pork, mix together rub ingredients and apply generously to meat. (I find using cooking gloves helps keep the rub on the meat instead of on your hands). wrap the meat and let marinade overnight..
- prepare your smoker for indirect heat, place a pan of water in with it as well. (in the water pan if you have a vertical smoker, place a pan on the rack underneath where the meat will be if using a horizontal grill/smoker). also soak your wood chips following the directions (this might require preparing them overnight.
- let the pork sit outside if the fridge for at least an hour before cooking. get the charcoals fired up and the grill at a consistent temp of 225.
- throw a few pieces of wood on the coals, place the meat on the grill at the furthest point from the heat, stick a meat thermometer in the thickest part.
- close the lid and let it work. avoid peeking! do check it occasionally to regulate the internal temp (again the less number of times the better) until the internal temp reaches at least 190 ( this seems very high, but this is the temp that the collagens in the far begin to break down, I aim for right about 200 myself which will take about 12 hours. if using a horizontal smoker, rotate it half way through to ensure it cooks evenly (this step is not as important if using a vertical smoker).
- I keep a spray bottle full of an red wine vinegar and some juice around and any time I open the grill, I spray it down just to ensure it stays good and moist... you can also use things like beer or Dr pepper... after about 8 hours you won't need any more smoke flavor so I quickly wrapped it in tin foil and put it back on for the remainder of the time.
- add coals and wood chips accordingly to regulate the heat and smoke in the grill. smoke keeps it tender as well as giving it the delicious flavor but make sure to keep the smoke constantly moving to avoid it getting bitter... I prefer hickory, cherry or wood wood to mesquite because mesquite is much stronger flavored and it will have plenty of smoke flavor as it is....
- at this point make the sauce ( for the sauce I used, add all the ingredients in a sauce pan, bring too a boil then let simmer and thicken up for about 15 minutes). also slice onions, and jalapeños (I did half diced and half slices and kept the seeds, but you can do them however you like and keeping the seeds or not is up to you).
- once pork had reached desired temp, remove from heat, wrap in foil and let rest for an hour..
- preheat oven to 300.
- unwrap and place on a glass baking dish (or if using metal coat with tin foil) the bone should pull right out. using hands or 2 forks pull pork apart, removing any excess fat as needed. add jalapeños and pour enough sauce to coat the meat, not enough to over power it and mix all together. then place in the oven for 15- 30 minutes. remove from oven and mix in the onion slices....
Just throw it on some white bread, sweet Hawaiian buns, in a taco I'm definitely not opposed to making pulled pork in the slow cooker or oven, but if you want real smoked pulled pork, it's gotta be smoked, low and slow. Slow cooker pulled pork is incredibly juicy, tender and flavorful with the perfect blend of spices. I used smoked sea salt and a smokier paprika to still get a. This pulled pork benefits from a delicious spice rub full of traditional ingredients you find in any good pulled pork. You can even leave your house.