Basic Pulled Pork Smoke

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Hia Peavley! Welcome to SMF and congrats on the butt! It's kinda tough to answer ya 'cause I can't find the type of equipment ya got... Stop by the Roll Call forum and start a thread 'bout yerself and rig...etc.. and then I'll wager you get alot more concise and accurate answers!

As far as folks/butt, figger around a pound a person, with sides, but 'member a butt has maybe a pound to two of fat...
 
I usually get about 20 pulled pork sammies from one 7 pound butt.

Start the charcoal in a chimney and add them to the firebox. throw 1-2 chunks of hickory on top. Add unlit charcoal and chunks as needed. I have to assume you are not using the "instant light" charcoal, that would add unpleasant flavor if you added that unlit to the fire.

Once the fire is going and my smoker is at temp, I need to add charcoal and chunk about very 1 1/2 to 2 hours. I'm using a CharGriller Smokin' Pro and lump charcoal.

Hope this helps.

Take care, have fun, and do good!

Regards,

Meowey
 
hey Meowey, does everyone make sammies from butt? I guess I like mine just in a pile, sauced a bit with a slice of bread on the side. I did use onion rolls last one tho...yum!
 
Hey yall,

Thanks for the responses. I just went to the Roll call section and did a thread. I have an Oklahoma Joe offset horizontal smoker/grill. The coals that I was using were the briquets (kingsford). I will go to the store and look for lump charcoal for the next time. I was thinking Academy may have lump charcoal, I have never seen it though. Any other suggestions on where to find lump charcoal?

Thank Yall again,
Steve
 
Also remember the only stupid questions are the ones you don't ask
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I usually count on the butt cooking down to about 30-40% of it's raw weight - so a 7lb butt should cook down to about 4lbs of meat (minus bone), and I count on about 1/4 a pound of that per person (I usually do sammies). So that's about 16-20 sammies per 7lb butt... Basically what Meowy says holds true.

I prefer the sammies, but when I get into the heat of eatin' I usually just try to shove as much pork down my throat as possible, and the bread just gets in the way.
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Which size OK Joe's do you have? If you have the large one you can (and I would suggest that you do) burn logs. The short logs that you get in the 50# onion sack thingies @ academy sports, Lowe's etc. are cut to size especially for that type of smoker. Just start a small c'coal fire fo base, then add the logs as needed maintaining a good bed of coals.

Not everyone has a "stickburner", but those that use them swear by the flavor you get when all your heat comes from hardwood flame.

The 1/4# of cooked meat per person works well as an average when catering provided you have sides. If you're feeding a bunch of chow hounds and have very little in the way of sides I'd recommend that you double it or better.

My rule of thumb personally is that most all Q is better after a stay in the freezer in a vac pac provided you reheat it correctly. That being said, it's always better to cook more than you think they can eat. When it comes to good Q, folks'll surprise you from time to time. And then there's always those few that want to take a little home for their daughter that couldn't come etc.
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.

I've never seen leftover Q go to waste.

When looking for lump c coal, avoid the Kingsford stuff. I don't care much for the Cowboy brand, but it beats the heck out of The K. My favorite is Ozark Oak brand. As far as where to buy it, Most of the big home improvement stores have it. Most supermarkets in my area carry some type of lump these days too.
 
I like it that way too! The prevailing choice here seems to be sammies, so that's how I answered the question. Served the way you like it, probably only about 16 servings from a 7 pound butt!

Take care, have fun, and do good!

Regards,

Meowey
 
Thanks SmokyOkie. I have the Oklahoma Joe Longhorn, I do not know if this is the big one or not. But I will try the logs you mentioned above. I will post some pics and let yall know how it turns out. Thanks
 
also peavy.........Royal Oak now sells lump......picked up a bag by mistake.......werks good.......but burns faster and hotter than brickquettes



d8de
 
Hello, I am trying to add a few things to my ARSENAL
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of briskets so I would like to make a decent pulled pork dinner to offer. I have tried afew in the past to less than rave reviews....the problem being somewhat too smokey or not enough flavor...I use 3-different sizes of Oklahoma Joes Offset smokers (and) I only use whole pecan logs. Please give mesome suggestions to try?! Anything is GREATLY appreciated!!!

Ken
 
The procedures described in the first post in this thread will work on any type or size smoker. Give it a try. Enjoy the journey!

Take care, have fun, and do good!

Regards,

Meowey
 
I guess first thing Ken would be to get a good rub. Next I would say to follow the instructions posted on the first post here. Then try finishing the pork with SoFlaQuers finishing sauce. I tried this for the 1st time today and is the best pork I have ever done. As far as to much smoke, maybe try a milder wood, one of the fruit woods.
I am sure others will be along to give suggestions.
Here the link to the finishing sauce...
http://www.smokingmeatforums.com/for...ead.php?t=2516
 
The "too much smoke and not enough flavor" comment makes me think you might have a TBS issue. Make sure your logs are burning hot and clean and not rolling smoke out of the side box. If you're getting heavy white smoke, you're going to get a not so good flavor (cresote). You might be using too much of a good thing :)
 
Too smoky is definitely a creosote problem. Creosote condenses out of smoke pretty much the same way that water condenses out of steam or humid air.

The first ting to watch is how hot your fire is burning. If, when you throw on a new log, you get white billowy smoke (wbs). open the oven door and the firebox until the fire starts going good and the smoke quality improves. A little white smoke doesn't hurt anything. but when it's dense and billowy, it doesn't take but just a few minutes to ruin meat.

The other issue to watch is your oven (cooking chamber) temperature. When oven temps dip below 250*, creosote deposition increases. I know you hear a lot about 225* "low& slow" cooking, but 250* low & slow works a little better when you cooking strictly w/ wood.

There's nothing wrong w/ pecan. If you're having trouble with pecan, you'd have trouble w/ just about any wood.

Next, are you allowing your meat to come to room temp before it goes on the smoker? Cold meat attracts creosote like a cold glass attracts condesation on a hot muggy day.

Last but not least, being fairly familiar w/ Oklahoma Joe's smokers, I would suggest that given the size of the fireboxes, you might be better off to fire w/ lump charcoal and add chunks from time to time, or burn "mini-logs", you know, the ones you buy in 50# onion sacks.

As to flavor and pork, nothing beats an inject followed by a generous rub, followed by a tight plastic wrap and 24 hrs in the fridge. If you can't get flavor into your butts that way, you probably need to find a new butcher.

Hope that helps, feel free to PM me any time if there's anything else I can help you with.
 
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SmokyOkie;114230 said:
As to flavor and pork, nothing beats an inject followed by a generous rub, followed by a tight plastic wrap and 24 hrs in the fridge. If you can't get flavor into your butts that way, you probably need to find a new butcher.




I gotta echo that fine recomendation right there!
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i was at a cook off this summer just watching and saw a guy pull a pork shoulder out of a smoker and it was in plastic wrap and foil it just fell apart. question is does that have to be a special kind of plastic wrap or just the basic wrap iam talking the meat fell apart. i have no idea what temp or how long because it is all secrets at those things thank for any info
 
I recall DeejayDebi telling us not too long ago that most plastic wrap is good to about 260°F. I would not cook in it, wrapping in plastic wrap for resting purposes would help you get that "falling apart" you described. You could PM DeejayDebi for more info!

Hope this helps!

Take care, have fun, and do good!

Regards,

Meowey
 
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