If I'm using a pellet grill, like i did this past weekend, i usually put it on at 180⁰F to get more smoke flavor for the first couple hours, then crank it up to 225 until it hits the stall somewhere between 150-170. I like to wrap it at that point and turn it up to 250-275, depending on time, which lets the fats really render and you catch rhe juices. When i take it off the smoker, i like to pour the juices into a fat separator, and when we are done eating, i reintroduce the separate fat juices and vacuum seal the leftovers. Reheat by dropping it into a sous vide or just hot water, and it tastes just like it was fresh.
I am attempting my first ever smoking of a pork butt. This recipe looks easy enough, but I'm worried about maintaining the temperature in my smoker because I've never used it before. Wish me luck! (Tips and advice for beginners welcome!)
Had to play it back several times to see if I was missing something. At around :38 seconds, it sounds like you said that you need a boneless pork shoulder for this recipe. Did you mean to say bone-in?
I like to vacuum seal and freeze it for later. Great to add to baked beans and plain old pinto or great northerns. When cooking from dry beans, I would season and cook them with ham hocks, then add the pulled pork at the end to keep from ivercooking it.
I put my first one on at midnight and the family came over at 5pm but i got the dreaded temperature stall so had to take it off at slightly below the ideal internal temperature but it was fine. Never knew about this beforehand.
I smoke 2 shoulders about every 3 months. I never wrap mine at anytime like many people do. I have a large offset barrel smoker and only use whole logs instead of chips. Pretty much smoke them just like you do and they are always perfect.
What are those black and yellow gloves at 1:53? I need gloves to handle hot brisket and such. Those look handy (much more so than layering cotton with nitrile).
Mine is usually a 6-8 hour cook at around 275. I'm still working on my fire and temperature control. I usually keep it simple with a 50/50 salt and pepper mixture, so my smoke makes or breaks it.
You should try mopping with mango habanero juice. After first 3hrs, start mop every 1hr.. 1pepper to 4cups =32oz mango juice . Bring to low boil 5mins. Let stand 5mins
I did a 10lb bone-in shoulder at 250F for about 10.5 hours. I even wrapped it once it hit 175F internal. However, I noticed that the piece opposite of the bone-in side was much tougher like it was overcooked. How can I prevent that from happening?
I’ve made pulled pork pizza with the extra. Homemade crust with some bbq sauce then the meat. I top with Colby Jack cheese then sliced onions on top of the cheese. Anything goes. However you like pizza.
2 more pro tips... #1 You can put your seasoning in the coffee maker, run apple cider vinegar through the cycle. It cleans the maker, and the brine is easily injectable. Taking out the extra seasoning #2 Those pieces of fat/gristle are perfect treats for Dogs, cats, even chickens. 😜🤙
Only been smoking for a couple years now and have found that when I smoke brined chicken then after resting I put in the fridge the smoke flavor seems to be drawn deeper into the meat. Would pork respond the same or does the bark prevent a deep smoke flavor?
I usually wrap but wanted to try this to get the bark. An 8 pound butt only took 7 hours at 225 degrees. Wondering what went wrong.. used a pitboss austin xl.
Thanks for these 101 guides. Yet to start smoking or even barbecuing - got a new Kamado boxed in the garage waiting on a new deck to be built. As a result I've only just found your channel in the past 3 weeks. Great content, brilliant production - I even enjoy the voice overs 😉 Question: Is there any drippings or even a wet pan which could be placed under (lower) the shoulder to create au jus to toss the shred into? Again, I've 0% exp. with this but thinking that it might be a way to go on something which is actually a very lean meat.
@@Heygrillhey thank you so much! I've actually been seeing your recipes here and there for years! Even tried a couple! I love the trophy! I can throw out my mortar, and use it with my pestle when I make my rubs!!! 🥰🥰😁😁😁
@@Heygrillhey what if it’s 2-7.5 lb that I’m cooking at the same time? Lol. Opened the package and found 2 separate ones. I used the mustard and hey grill hey sweet rub. I’m ready to rock n roll
@@Heygrillhey Well from a long time viewer it's much less enjoyable to watch. It feels like it's an old video just being rehashed as opposed to something new and refreshing.
If I'm using a pellet grill, like i did this past weekend, i usually put it on at 180⁰F to get more smoke flavor for the first couple hours, then crank it up to 225 until it hits the stall somewhere between 150-170. I like to wrap it at that point and turn it up to 250-275, depending on time, which lets the fats really render and you catch rhe juices. When i take it off the smoker, i like to pour the juices into a fat separator, and when we are done eating, i reintroduce the separate fat juices and vacuum seal the leftovers. Reheat by dropping it into a sous vide or just hot water, and it tastes just like it was fresh.
Sounds great! Sounds like a beef brisket recipe.
I am attempting my first ever smoking of a pork butt. This recipe looks easy enough, but I'm worried about maintaining the temperature in my smoker because I've never used it before. Wish me luck! (Tips and advice for beginners welcome!)
I cut the roast into baseball size cubes to reduce cooking time by alot.
Had to play it back several times to see if I was missing something. At around :38 seconds, it sounds like you said that you need a boneless pork shoulder for this recipe. Did you mean to say bone-in?
Either will work fine!
Right about 2:26 you can observe the removal of the shoulder bone.
I'm makin mac n cheese and pulled leftover smoked pork butt tonight... That's a meal by itself..
Your cheerful personality makes your presentations fun to watch.
I like to vacuum seal and freeze it for later. Great to add to baked beans and plain old pinto or great northerns. When cooking from dry beans, I would season and cook them with ham hocks, then add the pulled pork at the end to keep from ivercooking it.
I put my first one on at midnight and the family came over at 5pm but i got the dreaded temperature stall so had to take it off at slightly below the ideal internal temperature but it was fine. Never knew about this beforehand.
Thanks for making me a better cook. I have been watching for a long time.
I smoke 2 shoulders about every 3 months.
I never wrap mine at anytime like many people do. I have a large offset barrel smoker and only use whole logs instead of chips. Pretty much smoke them just like you do and they are always perfect.
HEY! Smoking two of them now for picnic this evening.Usually use your Sweet Rub, but decided to try your Rib Rub.
What are those black and yellow gloves at 1:53? I need gloves to handle hot brisket and such. Those look handy (much more so than layering cotton with nitrile).
They’re a product we’re working on! Launching early 2025! gloves.heygrillhey.com
Mine is usually a 6-8 hour cook at around 275. I'm still working on my fire and temperature control. I usually keep it simple with a 50/50 salt and pepper mixture, so my smoke makes or breaks it.
Would cutting the meat in half reduce the cook time?
Yes!
You should try mopping with mango habanero juice.
After first 3hrs, start mop every 1hr.. 1pepper to 4cups =32oz mango juice . Bring to low boil 5mins. Let stand 5mins
I did a 10lb bone-in shoulder at 250F for about 10.5 hours. I even wrapped it once it hit 175F internal. However, I noticed that the piece opposite of the bone-in side was much tougher like it was overcooked. How can I prevent that from happening?
I’ve made pulled pork pizza with the extra. Homemade crust with some bbq sauce then the meat. I top with Colby Jack cheese then sliced onions on top of the cheese. Anything goes. However you like pizza.
2 more pro tips...
#1 You can put your seasoning in the coffee maker, run apple cider vinegar through the cycle. It cleans the maker, and the brine is easily injectable. Taking out the extra seasoning
#2 Those pieces of fat/gristle are perfect treats for Dogs, cats, even chickens.
😜🤙
Only been smoking for a couple years now and have found that when I smoke brined chicken then after resting I put in the fridge the smoke flavor seems to be drawn deeper into the meat. Would pork respond the same or does the bark prevent a deep smoke flavor?
I usually wrap but wanted to try this to get the bark.
An 8 pound butt only took 7 hours at 225 degrees.
Wondering what went wrong.. used a pitboss austin xl.
Cut grooves through the fat cap so the smoke and seasoning get to the flesh.
Thanks. Always nice to get ideas/tricks/tips.
I have a gas grill, how long do you put the butt roasted in 4
Don't forget about Kalua pork. Pozole is another option.
Thanks for these 101 guides.
Yet to start smoking or even barbecuing - got a new Kamado boxed in the garage waiting on a new deck to be built. As a result I've only just found your channel in the past 3 weeks. Great content, brilliant production - I even enjoy the voice overs 😉
Question:
Is there any drippings or even a wet pan which could be placed under (lower) the shoulder to create au jus to toss the shred into? Again, I've 0% exp. with this but thinking that it might be a way to go on something which is actually a very lean meat.
For sure! A pan underneath would catch a ton of juice.
If you have a PBC(pit barrel cooker)your cooking time will be drastically reduced. There will be no sacrifice in tenderness or flavor.
I have three drum cookers. One PBC, one salt city drum, and one I built myself!
No wrap pulled pork.... Interesting. Gonna have to try it! Did you inject with anything before you smoked it?
Nope!
If it is just too large could I have the butcher cut it in half. Would it still work?
Yep! Sometimes we’ll do this or butterfly them to get them to cook faster and have extra bark.
Well for beginners is DEFINITELY right... ReaL EXPERT pit masters don't use pellet ovens, playing adult pretend time
Congrats, you win 🏆 this is obviously an EXPERT LEVEL COMMENT! I can tell you’ve been practicing for years.
@@Heygrillhey thank you so much! I've actually been seeing your recipes here and there for years! Even tried a couple! I love the trophy! I can throw out my mortar, and use it with my pestle when I make my rubs!!! 🥰🥰😁😁😁
Wow! I Must make this! Thank you! ❤
Going to smoke one on Thursday 🤗
Thanks Susie!
After cooking do you refreeze the meat or refrigerate it ?
I do either of I have extra!
How long does it usually have to cook for ??
It depends on how big the shoulder is, but a good estimate is 1.5-2hrs per pound.
Is there a reason you do the voice-overs vs live?
It was an experiment. We'll b back to live in a few videos.
What if I'm using a 15lb boneless--Cook time?
About 1.5hrs per pound at 225.
@@Heygrillhey what if it’s 2-7.5 lb that I’m cooking at the same time? Lol. Opened the package and found 2 separate ones. I used the mustard and hey grill hey sweet rub. I’m ready to rock n roll
Then the time would be based off of 7.5lbs! Sometimes I'll cut those bigger ones in half to shorten the cook time like that.
The long hair is the "tell" here.
Meaning what?
❤❤❤
I hope this is the last of the voice overs!
Probably a Todd thing
Getting close! And, no, it was a Susie thing. It's way easier on us to film that way, but we'll be back to our old style really soon.
@@Heygrillhey Well from a long time viewer it's much less enjoyable to watch. It feels like it's an old video just being rehashed as opposed to something new and refreshing.
Looking awesome. ( am I talking about the pork or the girl...😅 both.
😁😁🤙
Girl tie your hair up.... cringing over here. Nothing ruins a perfectly cooked meal, like the one you're demonstrating like a piece of hair...😮😅
Girl, chill. 😂 not your food, not your hair.
@@Heygrillhey lead by example 😃👌🏼