Beginners Luck Pulled Pork
by Fan Submission
Ingredients
- 7 pound bone out pork butt
- John Henry's Wild Cherry Chipotle Rub
- Jim Beam's Red Stag Bourbon
- Apple juice
- 2 (12 ounce) bottles of your favorite root beer
- Couple of freezer bags
- Couple of roasting tins
- Apple and cherry wood chips
- Lump charcoal
Directions
- Start the preparation roughly 36 hours before smoking the pork. So for this example, let's say Saturday morning.
- Thursday night is simple. Take your pork butt and double bag it in freezer bags.
- Pour in your root beers. Seal them up and place them in a tin in the fridge over night.
- Hop online and work up that hunger on the smokin' forums!
- Friday night, after 24 hours in root beer. Pull out the pork butt and let them drain, but don't pat dry (that's just wasteful).
- Start rubbing with John Henry's Cherry Chipotle and don't be shy. Wrap in plastic wrap and set in the fridge for another 12 hours.
- Saturday morning, it's time to get the smoker going at around 225-240 degrees. For this recipe, I don't use anything but water in the pan.
- Once the fires ready and the pan is full, pull out the pork butt and add a bit more rub where necessary. Throw that baby on the smoker and head back to the forums!
- The fun part starts at 140 degrees (internal temperature). I take 3 parts apple juice and 1 part Jim Bean's Red Stag Bourbon.
- Don't mess around here. When I say spritz, I want the pork butt dripping wet! Do this as often to keep the outside looking moist.
- This will slow down the cooking time but that's what it's all about. Every 30 minutes is a good rule but I just like to keep it moist looking.
- I keep doing this until I hit 165 degrees (internal temperature). I then wrap the pork butt in heavy aluminum foil, making sure to wrap it so no drippings get out. I also give it one last spritz.
- Cook the pork butt until it reaches 200 degrees. Remove the pork butt from the heat and let rest in a towel and cooler for as long as possible.
- Once the pork butt has cooled, start pulling the meat in it's own juices. No finishing sauce needed. It's ready to eat as is. I prefer using Hawaiian sweet rolls.