Tag Archives: Barbecue sauce

Pulled Pork

Smoker Chimney

Of all of the meats involved in barbecue, pulled pork is by far my favorite.   When done right, it’s moist, tender and sweet.   When done wrong, it’s dry and stringy. On the plus side, it’s pretty hard to do wrong.  Unless you are some large, BBQ chain restaurants.  I don’t know how, but some of them manage to turn this perfect meat into a mass of dry strings with sauce.

My husband was practicing his pulled pork when he indulged me in my blogging venture.  He’s a very patient hand model, so I want to profusely thank him for his participation in my blog this week.

The meat involved in pulled pork is a pork shoulder roast, or “Boston Butt”.  Now, you could skip the smoking, place the butt (hee hee) in a crock pot with a bit of water and a chopped onion, slow cook on low for 8 hours and presto, tender pulled pork.  Drain and add a smoky barbecue sauce and it’s pretty awesome.   Is it the same?  No.  But, it’s pretty darn good for doing pretty much nothing more than dumping a few ingredients in a container and flipping a switch.

But, smoking the Boston Butt brings the pork to a whole different level.  First, there’s the injection, piercing flavors deep within the meat.  Then there’s the lovely rub and smoke infusing the meat with even more flavor.  Top it with barbecue sauce and you have pork nirvana.  Truly, the pork is just so amazing.

You can make an ugly drum smoker (google that!) or use a weber bullet (we have both) for an affordable smoker.  They are an endless source of entertainment and amazing food for us.  Top with an amazing Barbecue Sauce and serve with Cole Slaw.

Pulled Pork

1/2 Boston Butt, trimmed

Pork Butt Rub
1 cup light brown sugar (packed)
2 tablespoons chili powder
2 tablespoons dry mustard (love Coleman’s)
2 teaspoons cayenne pepper (more if you like it spicy!)
2 tablespoons coarsely ground black pepper
1 tablespoon ground white pepper
2 tablespoons onion powder
2 tablespoons granulated garlic
2 tablespoons kosher salt

Pork Injection
1 quart apple juice
1/2 pint distilled white vinegar
3 cups sugar
1/2 cup table salt (not iodized)

Directions for the rub: Thoroughly combine all the ingredients in a large bowl. Set aside.

Directions for the pork injection: In a 4 quart saucepan, combine the juice and the vinegar over medium heat. Once the juice is warm, add the sugar and the salt and stir constantly. Without bringing the juice to a boil, stir until the salt and sugar are dissolved. Remove from heat and cool.

Bring the smoker to 275 degrees. How you smoke the meat depends on your smoker, so I won’t give you directions as each one is slightly different. While the smoker is heating, thoroughly inject the butt with the injection. Massage the rub into the meat, wrap in plastic wrap and return to the refrigerator until the smoker is at temperature. Smoke the meat until a nice bark is formed, the meat is thoroughly cooked, and tender enough to be pulled, about 6-8 hours. Longer, if you prefer to cook at a lower temperature.

Pork Butt Trimming

Trimmed Pork Butt

Pork Butt Injections

Pork Butt with Rub

Pork Butt on Smoker

Smoked Pork Butt

Not burnt, just bark!!

Pulled Pork Plate

BBQ Sauce

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Can you have a good barbecue with barbecue sauce from a jar? I suppose. Will you pay an arm and leg for it? Yes.

I am cheap. I prefer the more positive terms like “frugal” or “fiscally conservative” when it comes to food. If I can make it myself with better ingredients, for less money, I totally will. You think you are getting organic, high fructose corn syrup free sauces made with the finest ingredients? Probably not. And if you are, you are certainly paying for it. You can make this sauce in no time with ingredients you likely have on hand. Seriously.

What is barbecue sauce? Depends on the type you like. Generally barbecue sauces fall into two categories. I like tomato based “Kansas City” style sauce. I realize being from a mid-Atlantic state, I should be partial to South Carolina’s mustard based sauce, but I’m just not. I like the thick mahogany tomato based sauces. These sauces are not complicated. At all. Barbecue sauce is….ready? Ketchup (I don’t accept Catsup as an option, sorry Catsup crowd). Molasses. Vinegar. Mustard. Brown Sugar. Spices. Done. You think you can put these items in a pan and simmer for a bit? Then you can make your own barbecue sauce! The exact amount you need. No more half used bottles of sauce clogging up valuable real estate in your fridge, waiting to be tossed because you forgot how old they are. No more running to the store because that is the one ingredient you forgot. You will be set free from the tyranny of bottled barbecue sauce!! The best is you can customize it. Want it blazing hot? Add hot sauce or more cayenne. Want it sweeter? Add more brown sugar and leave out the cayenne. You can make the sauce exactly the way you want it! The following is a template of very basic and balanced sauce. Feel free to experiment!

Barbecue Sauce

1 cup (dry measure) ketchup
1 tablespoon molasses
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar (or white vinegar)
1/2 tablespoon mustard (I used French’s, whatever kind is handy)
2 tablespoons chili powder
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon crushed oregano
1/2 teaspoon granulated garlic (or powder)
1/2 teaspoon onion powder
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper

Combine all the ingredients in a small saucepan. Bring to a simmer and simmer until the flavors combine, about 5-10 minutes. Remove from heat and apply to your favorite barbecue item.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Rib Trimmin’

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

No, we are not discussing some plastic surgery that people in Hollyweird may or may not have done.  We are discussing trimming ribs so that they look their best on your barbecue.  As part of my continuing series on our barbecue competition aspirations, I wanted to share some behind the scenes magic.  Using a knife is dangerous stuff, please be careful and take all necessary precautions.

My husband has graciously (and patiently) decided to teach me and my camera the art of rib trimming.  First, please make sure you have a very sharp knife and a great cutting board.  Then, you need a bowl to keep those trimmings!  Don’t throw them away.  I’ll have a post on what to with the trimmings that will seriously blow you mind.  It’s awesome.

Most of you will start with this crazy hunk of meat:

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Kind of intimidating and not very “rack of rib” like.

With the ribs facing away from you, remove the top flap of meat with your sharp knife.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Flip the ribs over and cut through the cartilege so that the extra triangle you see below is removed.  The rack should appear more rectangular now.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

To me, the next step is crucial.  Turn your rack of ribs back over.  You’ll see a membrane covering the boney rib part.   That sucker has to go.  If you don’t remove it, the ribs are tough and your rub can’t penetrate into the meat as effectively.  You want to gently insert your knife (or a butter knife, depending on the strength of the membrane) and wriggle a starting piece free.  Once you get a decent sized starting piece, the whole membrane will pull free.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Flip the ribs over and carefully remove any excess fat on the top.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Your ribs should now look amazing and of uniform size and ready for the rub!!

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Generously apply the rub of your choice.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Make sure you have your charcoal and wood chips/blocks are ready to go, and your smoker is at temperature.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Place the ribs on a rack and smoke for a few hours (2-3) over 250 degrees fahrenheit.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Ready to wrap!

Wrap the ribs in foil and return to the smoker for another hour until perfect!

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA