Hey guys, So I started a thread a while back asking if anyone had done this but nobody seemed to respond with much advice. I gave it a shot. I rubbed a pork butt with a rub I found online on another website. Its my usual pork rub, its called Memphis Meathead Dust. I smoked the pork at a little higher temp than my usual 225. I was reading that some guys are smoking them at 275ish with good results so thats what I did. I also wanted to try and develop some sort of bark/crust in the short time it would be in the smoker.
The recommended sous vide temp for pulled pork was 155-165 depending on where you looked. I decided on 160. I smoked the pork butt with apple wood chunks on top of some charcoal. I smoked the pork until the IT hit 155, then brought into the house, and into the sous vide back. I recommend using a smaller butt than I did...or get some bigger bags. I was using the widest bag my vacuum sealer can seal...and it was a pain getting into the bag. I sealed the bag, not much vacuum...just barely enough to get the air out. Then washed the outside of the bag well, and into the water for 24 hrs. (ended up being about 20 hrs)
Timeline....Friday: 6pm meat went in the smoker
9:30 meat at IT of 155
10pm in the preheated sous vide water
Saturday 6pm....out of water to pull
7 pm...lay on couch...belly full of delicious meat.
I can tell you the meat was outstanding. Very tender...extremely moist and juicy. If you are a big bark person...not the method for you. It wasn't crusty, crunchy bark. The smoke flavor was definitely there. The wife thought it was outstanding pulled pork.
before the smoker. basic pulled pork.
After about 3.5 hrs @ 275ish. IT of 155.
After about 20 hrs in the sous vide. 160 degrees.
out of the bag. Smelled great.
bone pulled out, clean as a whistle.
pulled apart very easily. The liquid in the other pan (from the bag) was very good drizzled over the meat, its like it made its own finishing sauce. I can assure you though, it was plenty moist and didn't need any extra sauce at all.
I made some pretzel buns on Saturday for the pork. I used the recipe that Al shared a while back. They were good. Went basic on the beans...dumped them from the can...haha.
The pork was every bit delicious and moist from the outside edge to the center. Every piece was very juicy and tender. Negatives would be the crust...no bark to speak of...but the flavor was there. It was a little light on the smoke flavor, but it was every bit present and delicious. I'm honestly trying to find flaws, but having a hard time. I'd say successful experiment for sure.
The recommended sous vide temp for pulled pork was 155-165 depending on where you looked. I decided on 160. I smoked the pork butt with apple wood chunks on top of some charcoal. I smoked the pork until the IT hit 155, then brought into the house, and into the sous vide back. I recommend using a smaller butt than I did...or get some bigger bags. I was using the widest bag my vacuum sealer can seal...and it was a pain getting into the bag. I sealed the bag, not much vacuum...just barely enough to get the air out. Then washed the outside of the bag well, and into the water for 24 hrs. (ended up being about 20 hrs)
Timeline....Friday: 6pm meat went in the smoker
9:30 meat at IT of 155
10pm in the preheated sous vide water
Saturday 6pm....out of water to pull
7 pm...lay on couch...belly full of delicious meat.
I can tell you the meat was outstanding. Very tender...extremely moist and juicy. If you are a big bark person...not the method for you. It wasn't crusty, crunchy bark. The smoke flavor was definitely there. The wife thought it was outstanding pulled pork.
before the smoker. basic pulled pork.
After about 3.5 hrs @ 275ish. IT of 155.
After about 20 hrs in the sous vide. 160 degrees.
out of the bag. Smelled great.
bone pulled out, clean as a whistle.
pulled apart very easily. The liquid in the other pan (from the bag) was very good drizzled over the meat, its like it made its own finishing sauce. I can assure you though, it was plenty moist and didn't need any extra sauce at all.
I made some pretzel buns on Saturday for the pork. I used the recipe that Al shared a while back. They were good. Went basic on the beans...dumped them from the can...haha.
The pork was every bit delicious and moist from the outside edge to the center. Every piece was very juicy and tender. Negatives would be the crust...no bark to speak of...but the flavor was there. It was a little light on the smoke flavor, but it was every bit present and delicious. I'm honestly trying to find flaws, but having a hard time. I'd say successful experiment for sure.