Hawaiian Pig
- 1 whole dressed pig, 120 pounds (see Pitmasters Tip Page 159)
- 1/2 cup Hawaiian sea salt or kosher salt
- 1/4 cup soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon garlic powder
- 1 tablespoon cracked black pepper
- 1 tablespoon msg (optional)
- Dig a hole 7 feet long by 4 feet wide by 2 1/2 feet deep.
- Pile dirt on one side of the pit only.
- You will be working on the other three sides.
- In the center of the pit build a large fire from a quarter cord of wood or 160 pounds of charcoal.
- When the fire is burning hot, add 20 to 30 large dry river rocks to the fire with a long-handled shovel.
- Continue to pile more wood or charcoal around and on top of the rocks.
- The fire is ready for cooking when all the charcoal is lit or the wood forms a bed of hot coals.
- With a long-handled shovel, make a shallow depression in the middle of the coals and rocks where the pig can lie.
- Push extra rocks aside and use them later to pile on the sides of the pig.
- Lay out one sheet of chicken wire on a table and place the whole pig on top, belly up.
- Use a sharp knife to score the inside of the hogs hams and shoulders.
- In a small bowl, mix the salt, soy sauce, garlic powder, black pepper, and MSG, if using.
- Rub the seasoning blend evenly on all exposed meat inside and outside of the cavity.
- With a long-handled shovel remove 3 to 4 large rocks from the fire and place them into the cavity of the pig.
- Immediately wrap the pig with the second sheet of chicken wire and secure with baling wire.
- On each end of the pig, make handles out of baling wire, extending 3 feet from the chicken wire.
- These will be used to lower your pig and to recover it from the pit.
- Place a layer of banana leaves over the hot rocks and coals.
- Using the baling-wire handles, lower the pig into the pit.
- Cover the pig with more banana leaves.
- With the shovel, push extra rocks around all sides of the pig.
- Cover everything in the pit with the wet burlap sacks.
- Cover the sacks with the canvas tarp.
- Starting at the edges of the tarp, cover the whole pit with dirt.
- After 12 hours of cooking, unearth the pig.
- Using the baling wire handles, remove the pig from the pit.
- Unwrap the chicken wire from the pig and let the pig rest for 30 minutes prior to serving.
- The pig can either be offered whole, letting the guests use tongs to pull their own meat, or hand-pulled, chopped, and served.
- Underground
- 1/4 cord of wood or 160 pounds charcoal; 20 to 30 large river rocks 8 to 10 inches in diameter (from a dry riverbed); 10 burlap sacks, soaked in water; a 12 x 10-foot canvas tarp; two 4 x 6-foot pieces of chicken wire; a spool of baling wire; 5 dozen banana leaves or 10 dozen ti leaves; shovel
pitmasters, hawaiian sea salt, soy sauce, garlic, cracked black pepper
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/hawaiian-pig-377309 (may not work)