BBQ Pulled Pork

BBQ Pulled Pork Sandwich

This is a southern style sweet BBQ that is not spicy hot.

Recipe & Images by Rick Beach

Award winning recipe by Rick Beach. Took First Place “Main Dish” in the “Old Mormon Fort Dutch Oven Cook-off Competition”, held in Las Vegas, Nevada (March 2017)

Ingredients

 

3 ½ lbs  Pork Loin trimmed and cubed to 1 ½ inch chunks

(Could use a combination of pork and beef stew meat)

6            Whole Bay Leaves

Salt & Pepper

1 Med   Sweet Onion Diced

¾           Celery Bunch Chopped (About 6 stalks)

4            Cloves Garlic Minced

2 Cans  Tomato Soup 10oz cans condensed undiluted

½ Can    Water (1/2 the soup can or 5oz of water)

1/3 Cup Worcestershire Sauce

2 Tbls     Liquid Smoke Hickory Flavor

½ Cup    Wine or Cider Vinegar

¼ Cup    Brown Sugar

1 Tbls    Mustard (Regular Yellow “French’s”)

1 Cup    Ketchup

Click here for a Slaw Dressing Recipe

Optional ingredients such as Sriracha Sauce, or various peppers, could be added to the basic sauce to spice this up.  Add in very small amounts and cook at least 30 minutes then taste test before adding more.  Hot spices tend to intensify as cooked.  It is easy to overdo hot spices and ruin a batch for the majority of your guests.  The basic sauce has always been the most popular in large groups.  Spicy is not.  You can multiply this recipe based on the group you are serving.   The BBQ can be made ahead and put in the freezer for later use.  This is served on hamburger buns.  A stack of coleslaw on the BBQ before adding the top bun makes for a killer BBQ sandwich.  This recipe makes approximately 24 standard hamburger sized bun servings.  Shown in the photos is a double batch (7lbs of meat) being done in a 12 inch Lodge Dutch Oven.

Place the chunked up Meat, Bay Leaves, Onion, Celery, and Garlic, in a greased heavy pot with lid for baking.  Preferably a Cast Iron Dutch oven is used.   Meat is slow cooked with lid on.  If using a Dutch Oven, and coals, use coals for 325°F heat.   If using your kitchen oven use 325°F also.   Use a pot sized to be at least half filled to avoid burning.

Bake for 2 hours then stir the meat chunks to rotate the bottom pieces to avoid burning.  There should be plenty of liquid remaining at this point and the meat just starting to shred apart.  If liquid is completely gone add 1 cup of very hot water, cover, and bake for 1 more hour.  Stir again and check for liquid.  If the meat is falling apart it should be ready to shred.  If not, bake an additional hour but make sure there is some liquid.  I have never had to go more than 4 hours baking.  Remove lid and keep on heat or in kitchen oven just until all liquid is absorbed or evaporated.  Check and stir often during this process…don’t burn it.

Once the meat is falling apart easily, remove the bay leaves and discard the leaves.  Use 2 forks to shred the meat….I like to use a potato masher to speed up the shredding.  Break apart the meat until it is all completely shredded.

In a large mixing bowl place the remaining ingredients.  Add the Soup, Water, Worcestershire Sauce, Liquid Smoke, Vinegar, Brown Sugar, Mustard, and Ketchup.  Whisk until combined.   Then pour liquid mixture into the baked & shredded meat mixture.  Then stir and fold to combine.

Cover and bake for 1 more hour.  Ideally the finished mixture is a sloppy joe consistency that doesn’t run.  If you’re finished BBQ is too thin/watery, cook/bake with lid off, stirring occasionally to avoid burning.  Cook/Bake uncovered until it reaches your desired consistency.

 

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DIY: Charcoal BBQ Grill for less than $4.00

I recently visited Home Depot and they had a clearance on a two piece adjustable cooking grate in their BBQ section.  Originally these were just under $10.  The grates were on sale for about $2.50.   One section is about 6 inches by 10 inches.  The other is about 6 inches by 12 ½ inches.  I bought two sets.  I wanted 2 of the short sections so that I could fit them inside the foil trays I found.  This would allow fairly flat storage when not in use.  The two grates overlap each other to form the larger cooking surface.

I also found a multi-pack of foil drip pans in the same section of Home Depot.  These worked out to be about $1 each.  These foil pans are 12X8X2   .  I am sure you could find cheaper ones, and of a size to also use the longer section of the cooking grates.

So with tax each portable BBQ grill is under $4 including tax.

One layer of hot charcoal briquettes will do 2 to 4 hamburgers or 2 good sized steaks.  It’s a perfect size for two people.  I tested this out last night with 2 steaks.  I forgot how much better a grilled steak tastes done over charcoal.

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