North Carolina Pig
- 1 whole dressed pig, butterflied, about 120 pounds (see Pitmasters, page 159)
- 1 cup salt
- Eastern Carolina pig pickin sauce (page 221) or Westerm Carolina Pig Dip (page 224)
- Place the butterflied pig on a heavy-gauge wire grate, skin side down.
- Score the meat of the hams and shoulders with a sharp knife; this allows the heat to penetrate.
- Use the full cup of salt to season the cavity of the hog, working the salt into all the crevices to make sure that all exposed meat is seasoned thoroughly.
- Flip the pig so it is skin side up on the wire grate.
- Light 20 pounds of charcoal in the bottom of the cooker, or if using wood, light 5 medium-size logs.
- When the charcoal is hot and grayish white or the wood coals are red hot, spread the coals into a barbell-shaped pile approximately the same size as the hog.
- This allows the thicker portions of the hog (shoulders and hams) to cook hotter and finish cooking at the same time as thinner portions (ribs and loin).
- When the coals are ready, grasp the wire grate with the hog on top and transfer it to the cooker.
- Center the hog over the barbell-shaped charcoal bed.
- When the hog has cooked for 2 hours, start 10 pounds of charcoal or wood in a separate burn pit.
- Transfer these hot coals to your primary cooker every hour or so, through the cookers side access door, during the cooking process to maintain a cooking temperature of 250 to 260F.
- Start another 10 pounds of charcoal or wood coals every hour to supplement the coals.
- After 4 hours, open the cooker, place the second wire grate over the pig, bind the edges of the wire grates together with rope or wire, and flip the pig.
- Be warned that this is a two-man operation.
- With one person standing at each end of the pig, grasp the edges of the grates and turn the pig.
- Close the cooker lid and cook for an additional 4 hours, or until the internal temperature of the hams and shoulders reach 190 to 195F.
- Let the cooked pig rest for 30 minutes, then bone and chop all the serveable meat, adding the skin if desired (see Pitmasters Tip).
- Add your choice of vinegar sauce to the pile of chopped pork to taste, and mix well.
- When cooking North Carolinastyle chopped pig, the skin provides a couple of tasty serving options.
- The chopped meat may be placed back into the hollow, crisp pork skin and served buffet style.
- The other option would be to chop the crispy skin and add it to the meat to provide extra flavor.
- Direct heat
- Hickory
- 1 single-chamber direct cooker (with firebox inside the main cooking chamber), plus an additional grill or burn pit; 80 pounds charcoal and wood chunks for seasoning or 1/4 cord of wood; 2 rectangles of heavy-gauge wire fencing or grate, slightly larger than the pig but smaller than the cooker.
pitmasters, salt, eastern carolina pig
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/north-carolina-pig-377306 (may not work)