- Jun 28, 2015
- 483
- 296
Being from St. Louis I have had a lot of "backyard porksteaks", it's a stable of the St. Louis summer diet.
But there is very little standard beyond that. You will find guys doing them hot and fast on the grill, others low and slow in the cooker, yet others charing them on the grill and then basically boiling them in sauce.
None of those methods give the exact results I want. I want fork tender, sauced but not drowning, with fat completely renders where there is no "chewy fat left". Note this is one of the few things that I do eat sauced.
I have tried a few different methods of "smoking" them but never got it right. One of the challenges with Porksteaks is all those different densities of meat that make up the shoulder.
So today I set out to try again, and I think I just about nailed it.
These were 100% fork tender, and there was 0 fat left that wasn't edible and delicious.
FYI, the rub, sauce, and glaze are mine. The sauce is pretty close to Sweet Baby Rays, just a touch sweeter, and the glaze is that sauce with some honey and blackberry jelly added.
The smoker temp may surprise you, but I ran it at 300, kind of compromising between the low and slow and the hot and fast methods. The basics of the method is just like ribs except 1.5/1/.5
Here are the detail steps:
1. Apply Rub
2. 1.5 Hours on Grates
3. In Covered Foil Pan with few pats of butter, brown sugar, and about 1/4 cup of pineapple juice, for 1 hour
4. Remove Cover, drain Liquid, Apply Sauce to both sides, and back in for 30 minutes (25 next time)
5. Remove from pans, place on grates, glaze the tops, and in the smoker for 20 minutes (15 next time)
These might have been just a touch dry, the wife said they were not. But next time I will do 25 minutes for step 4. And the sauce was starting to char a bit too much, so I will be doing step 5 for 15 minutes next time.
And what you have all been waiting for, the money shot (Note steps above were done 3 steaks to a pan, I just combined them to bring in the house):
Just killing some time on a Sunday. Tomorrow night is my first opportunity to prepare a meal for our new daughter-in-law.
This bad boy (3 bone 7.25 lbs) is all prepped and ready to go:
But there is very little standard beyond that. You will find guys doing them hot and fast on the grill, others low and slow in the cooker, yet others charing them on the grill and then basically boiling them in sauce.
None of those methods give the exact results I want. I want fork tender, sauced but not drowning, with fat completely renders where there is no "chewy fat left". Note this is one of the few things that I do eat sauced.
I have tried a few different methods of "smoking" them but never got it right. One of the challenges with Porksteaks is all those different densities of meat that make up the shoulder.
So today I set out to try again, and I think I just about nailed it.
These were 100% fork tender, and there was 0 fat left that wasn't edible and delicious.
FYI, the rub, sauce, and glaze are mine. The sauce is pretty close to Sweet Baby Rays, just a touch sweeter, and the glaze is that sauce with some honey and blackberry jelly added.
The smoker temp may surprise you, but I ran it at 300, kind of compromising between the low and slow and the hot and fast methods. The basics of the method is just like ribs except 1.5/1/.5
Here are the detail steps:
1. Apply Rub
2. 1.5 Hours on Grates
3. In Covered Foil Pan with few pats of butter, brown sugar, and about 1/4 cup of pineapple juice, for 1 hour
4. Remove Cover, drain Liquid, Apply Sauce to both sides, and back in for 30 minutes (25 next time)
5. Remove from pans, place on grates, glaze the tops, and in the smoker for 20 minutes (15 next time)
These might have been just a touch dry, the wife said they were not. But next time I will do 25 minutes for step 4. And the sauce was starting to char a bit too much, so I will be doing step 5 for 15 minutes next time.
And what you have all been waiting for, the money shot (Note steps above were done 3 steaks to a pan, I just combined them to bring in the house):
Just killing some time on a Sunday. Tomorrow night is my first opportunity to prepare a meal for our new daughter-in-law.
This bad boy (3 bone 7.25 lbs) is all prepped and ready to go: