Tender Pulled Pork
- 8 lb Pork Butt (Bone-in)
- 1 tbsp Olive Oil
- 1/4 cup Kosher Salt
- 1 cup Lemon Pepper
- 2 tbsp Sugar
- 2 tbsp Turmeric Powder
- 1 tbsp Paprika
- 1 tsp Garlic Powder
- 1 tsp Celery Salt
- 1 tsp Garam Masala
- 1 tsp Fennel Powder
- 1/4 tsp Cayenne Powder
- 1 dash White Pepper Powder
- Set up your grill for an indirect heat method.
- An insulated cooker such as The Akorn works well for this.
- Simply create a small pile of charcoal (roughly pyramid or cone shaped) interspersed with large chunks of hard wood.
- Place a fire starter under the top few pieces of charcoal and light.
- Close the lid and fully open all the vents.
- Give the charcoal 20 to 30 minutes to light.
- Throttle the top and bottom vents to barely open and allow the temperature to settle into the desired cooking range.
- This should take another 20 to 30 minutes.
- For this cook, get the grill around 300 to 325 Fahrenheit.
- This will reduce your cook time and give you a nice crust on the meat.
- However, you will not get as much smoke flavor on the meat.
- Note: The Akorn has a smoke stone accessory that works great at creating a barrier between the meat and the heat, plus you can put an aluminum pan on it to catch the meat drippings to make clean up easy.
- Thoroughly combine all the dry ingredients.
- Trim excess fat from the pork butt leaving about a quarter inch layer.
- Rinse the butt with cold water and then pat dry with a paper towel.
- The surface of the meat needs to be as dry as possible.
- Coat the meat with a very light coating of olive oil to help the the dry rub stick to the meat.
- Sprinkle the meat with the dry rub and spread the rub with your hands.
- The meat should be completely coated with a thin layer of rub.
- Put the meat on the grill.
- Cook for 5 to 6 hours.
- Resist the urge to open the grill to look at the meat.
- Monitor the grill temperature.
- Throttle the bottom vent as necessary to maintain between 300 to 325 Fahrenheit.
- After about 5 hours check the meat.
- The best method for telling if the meat is done or not is to poke the meat with a skewer.
- If the skewer slides into the meat without any resistance (like cutting warm butter) the meat is done.
- Be sure to check several locations on the butt as different parts cook at different rates.
- Continuing cooking until done.
- When done, remove the meat from the grill.
- Set aside and lightly cover with foil and let rest for at least 30 minutes, preferably 1 hour.
- After the meat has rested, remove the bone.
- It should practically fall out on it's own.
- Pull the meat into long strands.
- Try not to eat all the crispy bits before you serve your family and guests.
- For a little extra zing, sprinkle a small amount of the dry rub onto the pulled meat and mix.
- A little bit goes a long way.
- Serve and enjoy.
olive oil, kosher salt, lemon pepper, sugar, turmeric, paprika, garlic, celery, garam masala, fennel, cayenne powder, white pepper
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/363905-tender-pulled-pork (may not work)