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Pulled Pork, easy like Sunday morning

Pulled pork is one of my favorite American (Southern) food. The first time I tasted the pulled pork is in our HOA annual “Pig Pickin'” party, a few years back. Neighbors brought home style side dishes, salads, and dessert to the party. And the star is the most delicious smoked pulled pork. The cooks (also our neighbors) arrived early in the morning, and setup the smoker in our community park. A commercial tow-behind grill is what normally used to cook the pork. They prepare about 5-6 Boston butt the day before, covered with dry rubs. In the early morning, they set the grill to low temperature, put the “butt” on the grill, let them cook 6-8 hours. “Low and slow” is the secret to make the super flavorful, tender, and juicy pulled pork. When it’s done, the bone in the “butt” can be easily pulled out. The meat is fork tender, moist, covered by a thin layer of “bark”. The cooks then used a pair of fork to shred the meat into small pieces. The dripping from the meat is collected and boiled with a little bit vinegar, mustard, and pepper to make the sauce. You can make sandwiches with the pulled pork, or just get a plateful of the juicy, tender, smoky meat, and enjoy it with a big cup of cold sweet ice tea.

To make the best pulled pork, there are three most important things to take care. The dry rub, the temperature, and a couple of cold beers. Every cook has his/her own dry rub recipe, which makes their unique flavor. The grill temperature is mostly in the neighborhood of  220 F and 260 F, and the internal temperature of the thickest part should reach 190 F when taken out of the grill. You need a lot of patience waiting for the pork to cook. So you can just leave it alone, go mow the lawn, then sitting in your favorite lawn chair, open a cold beer or two, enjoy the easy Sunday morning.

Today, I’ll show you how I made the Chinese seasoning pulled pork, featured in our most Supper Club party. I like the traditional Southern style dry rub, but I also like the Hunan bacon (腊肉) seasoning, which is simply salt, Sichuan pepper, and the herbs of your choice. I think the low and slow smoking process is similar to making the Hunan bacon. I have been experimenting with the pulled pork seasoning, and resulted in the following recipe:

Recipe

1                  Boston Butt (medium size is easier to handle, about 6-7 lbs)

1/2 cup       sea salt

3 tsp           Sichuan pepper (depends on how much you like it, you can adjust the amount)

3 tsp          black pepper

4-5             star anise

1 tsp          cumin seed

1/2 tsp       clove

1/2 cup      brown sugar

Cooking Instruction (TL;DR. version)

Grill/Smoker 220F-260F, ~1.5 hours/lbs meat, 4 hours covered, open after till internal temperature reaches 190 F

Rest 1 hour before carving

 

Cooking Instruction (Full version)

Use a blender to chop and mix the salt and seasonings, I normally don’t put the brown sugar in the blender, so it won’t get sticky. You should get about 1 cup of the dry rub. Be creative, add hot chili pepper if you want it spicy, add cinnamon stick if you like the flavor. The Boston butt is such a big chunk of meat, you’d rather prepare more rub than needed, which you can always use later.

Now rub the seasoning all over the Boston butt, on both sides and both ends. Some people like to trim the fat cap, I like to keep it on the meat. The melted fat infuse with all the spices flavor, makes the meat more tasty. Because we are going to use low temperature,  cook very long time, most of the fat will drip away eventually, so I don’t worry too much. You shouldn’t either, how many time you are going to cook this in a year? 😉

Put the seasoned Boston butt in a aluminum foil pan,  loosely cover with a large piece aluminum foil. Put the pan in refrigerator overnight, or at least 3-4 hours. The longer time you seasoned it, deeper the flavor goes into the meat. Take it out of the refrigerator the next morning, you may find some water dripped in the pan. Take the meat out, wash the pan, and put a small wire rack in the pan, and put the meat back in the pan, on the rack. The rack keeps the meat from the dripping during cooking. Cover the meat with the aluminum foil, tightly seal the edges.

Now prepare the grill. I learned from youtube videos to make a “snake” of charcoal briquettes. Then you put a few hot burning briquettes on one end of the snake, let it burning slowly towards the other end. You can control the speed of charcoal burning by putting more or less briquettes along the “body” of the “snake”. Combined with controlling the opening of the vents on the grill cover, you can control the temperature at a pretty precise level. Plus, you can just leave it alone, the briquettes in the picture lasted about 4 hours. Keep checking the temperature on the thermometer, adjust the vent so the temperature stabilizes a little bit over 200 F. Now place the pan with the meat on the grill. The temperature will rise a little bit more after 30-40 minutes, keep it below 260 F. Don’t worry if the temperature went too high for a short time, the foil pan will keep the moisture inside, so the temperature and climate inside the pan has a little more tolerance than just put the meat on the grill.

Don’t frequently open the grill to check the temperature. Some people say every time you open the cover, you need add another 15-20 minutes to the cooking time. So leave it alone!!! Let the meat transform on its own. You can obviously use a remote reading thermometer to keep checking the internal temperature. When the temperature rises to 160 F, collagen inside the meat started melting, and turn into gelatin. This makes the meat tender, moist, and flavorful. This is also what happens during the making of braised pork. But if the temperature got too high, the muscle fiber shrank too much and squeeze the juice out of meat, meat became dry and hard.

Some instructions say 1.5 hours per pound at 225 F, or 1 hour per pound at 280 F. For the 6 lbs meat I was cooking, I estimated a good 6-8 hours at temperature between 220 F and 260 F. I let it run the first 4 hours without opening the cover, until the charcoal almost burn out, then I took the pan out, setup another charcoal snake in the grill, and put the pan back in there. This time, I open the aluminum foil cover and let the smoke get in touch with the meat. Use whatever wood chip you like to make the smoke on the charcoal. After 4 hours of cooking, the meat already smell really good. Fat started dripping into the pan, and the seasoning is going inside the meat.

I checked the temperature of the meat more often in the next two hours. The goal was to achieve a internal temperature of 190 F. Just for the peace of mind, the USDA safe cooking chart recommended 145 F internal temperature for pork. At 190 F the collagen and fat are perfectly melted, so you will have the most amazing piece of meat through out.

When it’s done, take it out of the grill and rest in the pan for another 45 minutes ~ 1 hour, covered in the aluminum foil. Now the bone can be easily pulled out, and you can start slicing the pork.

I didn’t have enough time this time, so the center of the meat is still a little chewy. You can still see some fibrous meat in the center of the cut. but the outer part of the meat is so tender and succulent. Knife slices through it like cutting butter. The fatty gelatin part just melted in my mouth.  I’m not saying the dish I presented to the party is not good. I’m saying the meat was so much better when I carved it and shared with my son :). He’s always been my best company cooking and cutting all kinds of meat on the grill. That’s why I encourage everyone to cook your own Boston butt, because it tastes the best on the chopping board, and the moment you enjoy it with your family and kids is priceless.

Happy grilling!

CH

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Columbia ChiHe Club meet 2(哥村吃喝团第二次聚会盛况直播)

I must write this blog in Chinese ,only this language can exactly express how deeply  I love these foods and people  !If you don’t recognize Chinese,please ignore the words,just enjoy the pictures …

 

初秋细雨绵绵的周日,这样的日子总会带给身在异乡的我们一丝淡淡的乡愁,在jihao团长的精心筹划下,Emmarou的鼎力协调场地下,全团成员各显身手,真是把吃喝团的聚会推上一个新高度!先给大家看看这个华丽大气的会所,再来一张我们团员的集体照(在美食的诱惑下,能把这一大帮人叫出来拍照,真是费尽死了,哈哈)注意!下面开始放大招了啊~~~来个菜的全景(甜点,水果一边呆着先)

 

开始上菜了,这次相比上次更有经验,大家都准备了自己的菜名,而且小资的Angle还带来了家里的摆设,真是锦上添花:(排名不分先后)

来自jihao团长,果然团长不负团长之名!

 

平时连厨房门都摸不着的“宁”也是为了聚会拿出学霸精神,捧着书现学,成果也很喜人!

 

首次参加我们聚会的haihong,给我们带来的她的好手艺,人家可是曾经参加过美食大赛,作为特邀评委:

“美事共享”群主Daisy 也带来了她的拿手菜和甜点:

爱开玩笑的“一日一恶”不仅笑话讲得好,菜也做得棒,他家领导的八宝饭也是一流:

小资的Angle连做饭都是这调调,模样好,味道清淡

本次聚会最文采菜名非“秦小样”莫属:

juan带来的珍珠丸子和香菇青菜在这酒肉横生的菜肴中简直就是一缕清泉:

川菜大师“xiaoyaomom”的菜真是妙光,等我回头一看已经见底了:

东道主Emmar真是不容易,身上挂着个树袋熊,忙前忙后,还不忘准备好吃的东西:

赵琳的水晶肘子也是大受欢迎,完全是真人不露相,平时到处嚷嚷要去人家蹭饭的人,新人Heidi的大肉包子是孩子们的最爱:

 

 

 

最新加入的“Ma G H”真是太积极,为了这次聚会做了一天的饭,饺子真是做得馅儿大皮薄,老公的红烧肉也是让人回味无穷:

其实聚会最欢乐的还是这帮小朋友们,有得吃有得玩,就跟去了游园会,更重要的是让他们能够从小懂得享受美食是人生的一大快乐,我估计回家孩子们都是秒睡,特别感谢Angle的face painting station,Scoot 的烤棉花糖,Jack的棉花糖机

再次感谢团员们的倾力贡献,聚会仅仅是预热阶段,后面我相信还有更多更高水准的朋友加入!哥村的生活将因为你们而变得充满亲情,丰富多彩,日新月异!