HELP PLEASE! A friend of mine offered to get me some Pork shoulder for me to turn in to pulled pork this weekend but its turned up rolled rather than whole. Will this work? I could send it back but given they have done me a favour I don't want it to turn into a pain. Any advice appreciated!
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Rolled Pork shoulder?
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It will work out fine. I personally think the shoulder is just a bit too lean for pulled pork, so given a rolled up version I would cook it like a porchetta (which is usually made from pork belly).
That means: unroll it, so you have a big flat piece of meat. Put some herbs and other flavors on it, roll it up again and tie it together well with butcher string. Cook it low 'n slow until done, typically 180° F, slice and enjoy.
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Founding Member
- Jul 2014
- 5150
- Stockholm, Sweden
-
Author of the book Barbecue, fire and smoke
Grills
PK 300
My custom built offset smoker
My custom built hot box
Thermometers
Thermapen
Fireboard
Accessories
Slow n' Sear
All my recipes, photos and information can be found at
https://hankstruebbq.com
YouTube channel
https://www.youtube.com/c/Hankstruebbq
EdF - it may be a nomenclature mismatch in my head, but I make PP from boston butt, located 'higher up' (above the shoulder).
As for porchetta: yes, I make it from pork belly. It's a great dish.
My recommendation to cook it like a porchetta has two advantages as I see it:
1. You get to pack it with a lot of herbs/spices, which is good for flavor
2. Instead of cooking it to 200° F-ish and pulling, you cook it to a slightly lower temp (still way past well done) and slice it. It looks good, and tastes good.
As for the lean-ness comment on my behalf: it isn't a night/day difference, so you can definitely make pulled pork from shoulder (I have), but I personally prefer just a little more fat which I get from a boston butt. And since this particular cut was in a roll already I figured it is a good candidate for a faux porchetta.
But there are many ways to skin a cat :-)
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I guess that we (at least I) consider the pork "shoulder" to be comprised of a top half (Boston Butt) and a bottom half (picnic roast). Both halves work quite well for pulling, the picnic just has more bone. Just semantics.
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Henrik, you were right - it was just nomenclature, as HorseDoctor pointed out. Happy cooking!
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I have two boneless butts/shoulders dry brining in the fridge now, cooking them on the PBC tonight. For one of them I trimmed off the "skinny" side, or strip, leaving one good hunk. I plan to roll up and shape the skinny, elongated piece into a smaller roast form as best I can.
After I did that to the first one I decided to leave the second one in tact, and i will probably shape it into a larger roast, similar to its original form before it was deboned. I am undecided on whether or not to twine them up, since I'll be cooking them on the PBC grate. I'm not sure if it's necessary. I'd rather not twine if it won't make a big difference. What say yall?
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You know that skinny part you're talking about: try this. You won't regret it!
Here is a simple dinner you could cook on a pancake griddle set on the grate above a fire pit or grill in someone’s backyard, as if performing a magic trick The result is a plate of thick, luscious pork with a deep, burnished crust, redolent of garlic and rosemary, and a sunset of soft, smoky peaches nutty with brown butter The technique is what Francis Mallmann, the Latin American chef who developed the recipe and is its most refined and stylish practitioner, calls “the uncertain edge of burnt.” It requires patience and keen observation
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Thanks EdF but these are for a party tomorrow, so I'll need all of it for that.
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IMO it is a bit more than semantics. Picnic is definitely not shoulder - more like lower leg, and not comparable to a butt/shoulder especially since the lower section of the picnic is a hock often called a fresh shoulder hock (even though its on the opposite end from the shoulder) to distinguish it from a ham hock. Back in the day say 1970 before BBQ was big and when we ground up wings for dog food at the A & P in Alabama where I was the most junior meat cutter ($1.80 per hour) most picnics were smoked and offered as a more affordable option to a ham. Even now here in pork central USA and near a huge processing plant, I don't really see them much and I would not use them for pulled pork. They aren't as scarce as say tri-tip......
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Originally posted by JPGators17 View PostI have two boneless butts/shoulders dry brining in the fridge now, cooking them on the PBC tonight. For one of them I trimmed off the "skinny" side, or strip, leaving one good hunk. I plan to roll up and shape the skinny, elongated piece into a smaller roast form as best I can.
After I did that to the first one I decided to leave the second one in tact, and i will probably shape it into a larger roast, similar to its original form before it was deboned. I am undecided on whether or not to twine them up, since I'll be cooking them on the PBC grate. I'm not sure if it's necessary. I'd rather not twine if it won't make a big difference. What say yall?
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