Ingredients: Authentic Pulled Pork Barbecue | |
Step 1: Now then. Let's BBQ! Put your roast in a big plastic container and pour the marinade in. | |
Step 2: Put this in the fridge overnight. Turn it a few times as you think about it to marinade evenly. | |
Step 3: The next day, setup your grill. Line the sides with charcoal. We want indirect heat on our roast. | |
Step 4: Remove your now marinated roast into a pan. | |
Step 5: When your coals are nice and hot and grey and no more chemical starter smell remains, sprinkle some wood chips over the coals. I don't soak the wood chips in water because I tried that and it just doesn't work on charcoal. It's best to just keep them dry. You have to use a lot more wood (like a whole bag) but at least you get results. | |
Step 6: This will ignite the wood pretty fast. | |
Step 7: And close the lid. This will stifle the fire and the chips will begin to smoke heavily. NOTE: Don't shut any of the vents, top or bottom, of your grill. Just enough air needs to get in to aid combustion. Too little and your fire will die. | |
Step 8: Every half hour or so, the wood chips will smolder out and stop smoking. | |
Step 9: I just sprinkle more chips in through the grill and some land on the grill itself. This starts up the smoking again. After the first couple of applications, you can also poke a stick around in the charcoal to reactivate the smoke rather than adding more chips, but you're basically going to have to be out there every half hour or so stoking up the smoke. | |
Step 10: And so it goes. For three hours. | |
Step 11: And now we come to the real secret to making good BBQ when all you have is your cheap charcoal grill. The CROCK POT! | |
Step 12: Take your roast off after three hours of smoking. Try and tear it apart with a fork. You won't be able to, it's still too tough. | |
Step 13: No, we're going to have to do this right. To do it right, we gotta slow cook it until this meat submits to our will. We accomplish that with between 6-8 hours in the Crock Pot on LOW. | |
Step 14: This is the part in the process where you add your spice rub. Coat the meat with it: | |
Step 15: Then pour in the marinade you reserved. | |
Step 16: And now, cook this bad boy for 6-8 hours. You can't really overcook it, or at least I haven't yet. This roast took 8 hours before it was falling apart. You can tell because when you stick a fork in it it truly just melts. I also turned the meat over around 4 hours in so no part of the meat wasn't submerged in the marinade at one point or another. | |
Step 17: When your roast has truly had the precious time it needs to become REAL DEAL BBQ, take it out. It should look something like this: | |
Step 18: And now the pulled pork part, wherein you "pull" the pork apart into shredded, sandwich-ready yumminess. | |
Step 19: When you're all finished, you're left with a big pile of delicious BBQ pork (note the bone at top of picture that this meat simply "fell" off of). Can you believe all this was $6? Well, OK, maybe more like $15 once you factor in the wood and the fixins, but heck - this is a lot of food. I have successfully fed eight people with this. | |
Step 20: Plate your pulled barbecue pork or make sandwiches out of it. |
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
ting ting
i am back again and i wanted to introduce another new dish for you all :)
guess what it is ?
give you 3 seconds to cool down yeah..
3
2
1
ting ting !!!
today i am going to introduce the BARBECUE PULLED PORK
this dish was quite complicated .. pls learn it nicely ya? :)
Ended by Nick^^ at 1/05/2010 11:04:00 PM
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