PORTER'S ANSON COUNTY PORK BBQ
INGREDIENTS:
Boston Butt 5 to 10 lbs. or whole pork shoulder
Wild Bill's Meat
Rub
Yellow prepared mustard
WILD BILL'S BBQ SAUCE
INGREDIENTS:
2 cups apple cider vinegar
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon fresh squeezed lemon juice
2 cups ketchup
1 tablespoon dry mustard
3/4 cup brown sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons chili powder
1/2 teaspoon Liquid Smoke (Colgin) brand
1 teaspoon freshly ground black peppercorns
(Tellicherry)
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon Cayenne pepper
1/4 cup
Molasses
1/2 cup
Jack Daniels
Tennessee Whiskey or 1/2 cup
Jim Beam Bourbon or
Early Times Whiskey (optional)
Mix above BBQ sauce ingredients in a sauce pot and bring to a boil making
sure sugar dissolves and simmer for 30 minutes. Let cool and store in
a glass covered container in refrigerator. This BBQ sauce is
referred to as the Piedmont, Western North Carolina or Lexington, NC style
sauce with the main ingredients ketchup
and vinegar.
Close-up of
pulled pork BBQ sandwich with
Classic Deli Slaw.
Above pulled pork
BBQ prepared on 09-02-14 and used the ugly drum smoker to smoke and cook the
Boston butts. View my
Ugly Drum Smoker page for sequence pixs.
The charcoal smoked flavor embedded in the pork is hard to beat!
The two Boston Butts weighted 20 pounds total and stayed in the Ugly Drum
Smoker for 8 hours and ran the temperature at around 275 degrees F. and the
pork internal temperature was around 191 degrees for "pulled pork."
Updated by Bill aka Mickey Porter on 09-02-14. This is another one of
those "off the chain good" recipes.....my bride enjoyed her plate of BBQ
with Marinated Slaw
and French Fries.
BBQ PLATE
Close-up pix. Can you say
"beautimous" out loud?
Pulled pork BBQ served with
Rainbow Slaw,
French fries, Hush Puppies,
lemon and tomato. I did a couple Boston butts on 01-31-18 and vacuum
sealed ten one pound packages for later usage. I shared some of the
pulled pork BBQ with our Pastor
Sam Abee and his family.
Web page updated
by Bill aka Mickey Porter on 01-24-19.
PULLED PORK UGLY DRUM PROCEDURES
Remove the lid and meat rack from the ugly drum smoker. Remove the
wire fire basket from the ugly drum smoker which has a pizza pan attached to
the bottom of the fire basket to catch the spent charcoal. Place 10 to
12 pounds of Kingsford Original charcoal in the ugly drum fire wire basket
and place the wire charcoal basket back into the ugly drum smoker maker sure
it is centered. Fill a Weber charcoal chimney about level full with
charcoal and place the chimney over a propane gas burner to ignite the
charcoal. Once chimney charcoal is ignited, turn off the gas burner
and let all the charcoal in the Weber chimney get to burning a glowing
orange color. It will take about 20 to 30 minutes for all the charcoal
in the Weber chimney to glowing a orange color. Place the ignited
charcoal over the top of the charcoal in the ugly drum smoker fire wire
basket and evenly spread out the ignited charcoal. Place about half a
dozen or more whole hickory nuts including the shells on top of the ignited
charcoal. Make sure all the four lower air intake vent holes are open
at least 1/3.
Place wire meat rack back into the ugly drum smoker. Place 2 to 4
Boston butts onto the grill meat rack surface and insert a couple digital
thermometers into the Boston butts. Place a long stem thermometer into
the side of the drum below the meat rack. Place lid back onto the ugly
drum smoker barrel making sure the 2 inch diameter plug is removed from the
lid to allow air flow through the ugly drum smoker. Maintain 275 to
300 degree F. for the ugly drum temperature by opening or closing the air
intake vent holes which are controlled by a 1 inch diameter magnet over each
3/4 inch diameter air intake/vent hole.
Once the internal temperature of the Boston butts are at least 190 degrees
F., remove from the ugly drum smoker and allow to cool enough to be able to
handle; pull the bone from the meat and shred using a couple forks or
special tools of your choice for such. Remove any sinew, gristle, fat
and skin from the pulled pork. I add 1 to 2 cups of my bbq sauce to
the shredded pork and salt and pepper to taste as well. Many, do not
add sauce to the pulled pork, but I do and most call it a
finishing sauce. Most
BBQers will have a couple types of bbq sauce available; e.g., Eastern or
Piedmont style sauce.
If you can't easily pull the bone from the Boston butt and it is clean, your
pork is not done enough!
Serve while hot with your favorite sides.
PROCEDURE PIXS
BOSTON BUTTS DONE - CHECK THE EXPOSED BONES
PULLED PORK BBG
SERVING THE BBQ
SIDES ANYONE
Home made baked beans and hush puppies goes very well with pulled pork
bbq along with home made slaw.
Classic Deli Slaw
served too.
See alternate BBQ sauce recipes at
Pulled Pork Sandwich page for Eastern and
Piedmont/Western NC style BBQ
sauce recipes.
Pix of my chopped pork BBQ platter with marinated slaw, hush puppies and
deck container grown tomatoes. I am "tight as a Georgia tick on the
back of a coonhound in the month of July" after working my way slowly and
deliberately through this BBQ platter savoring each delicious bite with the
spicy kick from the BBQ and the marinated slaw whereby awaking any would be
dormant taste bud saying, YeeHigh! Give this BBQ recipe a try!
Bill aka Mickey Porter 10-05-08
OVEN BBQ
Once you use hickory wood or charcoal to prepare BBQ, there is no going
back to oven BBQ or BBQ cooked using a gas cooker! You do not get the
smoked flavor, smoke ring and char. If you can't tell a difference,
your taste buds are seriously diminished and no longer work properly.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it!
Sequence pixs below with narrative type comments:
Spread prepared yellow mustard over entire Boston Butt.
Apply a good coating of
Wild Bill's
Meat Rub to Boston Butt
and place on a broiler pan uncovered fattest side up. Add several cups of
water to the broiler pan and place in an oven or smoker at 225 degrees for 6
to 8 hours or until internal temperature is at 190 degrees F. and meat
easily pulls from the bone. If you want to turn the meat every few
hours that is ok too. A few pixs along the way:
Boston Butt ready for the dry rub.
Boston Butt with the dry rub applied.
Boston Butt was first placed in my outside smoker and stayed at least
eight
(8) hours and brought inside and placed in oven set at 225 degrees F. for 2
hours until the internal temperature was 167 degrees F. 190 degrees is
the optimum internal temperature which the meat can be pulled from the bone.
Note:
My outside "PORTERSTEIN" smoker heating elements would only
get the cabinet temperature up to 200 degrees before placing the Boston Butt
inside and then dropped about 20 degrees....heating elements are too small
but work great for the lower temperature sausage making since I don't want
the temperature above 165 degrees F. However, you can get a good
hickory smoke flavor using smoldering hickory sawdust. Go to
http://www.portercalls.com/ShortStories/sausage_making.htm for a pix of
my smoker in operation.
The little inexpensive digital thermometer works great!
For pulled pork, this is what you are after around 190 degrees F.
Pix below:
Above Boston Butt did for
Pulled Pork
Sandwiches
Boston Butt pulled from the bone and ready to chop....my buddies use
their power meat grinders with a course plate but not necessary for a single
Boston Butt. A pair of meat cleavers works very well too in the hands
of someone who knows how to use them. For pulled pork BBQ, you need
the internal temperature of the pork to read around 190 degrees F.
Chopped Boston Butt ready for a "metamorphic" change into
some wonderful pork BBQ Anson County (Eastern) North Carolina Style.
I can almost smell and taste the BBQ sauce from the picture. My taste
buds did a little dance as if biting into a fresh cut lemon
slice. Add as much of the BBQ sauce as you desire but with this sauce,
the more you add the hotter it gets. This sauce is medium to hot and a
good balance between the hot pepper, sugar and vinegar flavors and they
compliment one another very well. There are millions of BBQ sauce
recipes around and this one will get you in the ball park. I call this
sauce a more or less table sauce since it has the tomato catsup and
brown sugar in
there and if you apply it to the meat while cooking it will turn very dark
on you. I don't think soaking the Boston Butt down with BBQ sauce
while cooking is necessary since most of it will leak off with the melted
fat from the Boston Butt while it is cooking.
Eastern North Carolina BBQ Sauce recipes omit the catsup and
and stick with a vinegar based BBQ sauce with black pepper, cayenne
pepper and
maybe chili powder while most of the Western NC style Lexington
region have a tomato based BBQ style of sauce and use pork shoulders instead
of a split hog. There is no set rule,
whatever you like, fix it! I lean toward the Western NC style of BBQ
using pork shoulders which can be done on a small outside grill, smoker or
inside oven without having to use a large pig cooker outside for a spit hog
and a tomato/vinegar base BBQ sauce but like both styles of BBQ. Visit
http://hkentcraig.com/BBQ.html
for info on Eastern NC BBQ. BBQ done right especially the whole split
hog slow cooked over charcoal or hickory embers what we call pulled BBQ
which is succulent and juicy with a hint of hickory smoke flavor served
right off the cooker whereby melting in your mouth doesn't really need a
sauce but to me it is like icing on the cake. My city slicker
version or quick fix BBQ can't compete with a slow hickory
ember fired/cooked BBQ but will get you by until you can do better and the
sauce does take it to a higher level. It will beat out any store
bought BBQ around these parts for sure.
Many here in the County wrap
the pork shoulder in heavy gauge aluminum foil leaving a small vent hole in
the top reducing the cooking/smoking time while retaining a lot of moisture
and is more or less "steam cooking" the pork shoulder on an
outside grill or inside oven and it is some
excellent non-traditional BBQ. This type of BBQ has the
grill/smoker temperature running around 270 degrees and some run it close to
350 degrees F. for three hours and remove the aluminum foil and
place on rack and reduce temperature back down to around
270 degrees and let the pork shoulder dehydrate (melting some of the fat
content) making sure the internal temperature is about 190 degrees F. That is another
cooking technique in it's
self and will do one down the road for the web if there is enough interest.
See my Pulled Pork Sandwich page for
this technique!
PS I am familiar with our local Eastern style of BBQing of
which my brother Allen Lee Porter has been doing for decades and I consider
him a "Grill Master." He is a welder by trade and has made all
sorts of pig cookers from the old traditional oblong type fuel oil tanks
with dual heating chambers for using hickory embers, charcoal and propane
gas. There are quite a few old timers around here that still burn down
hickory wood to produce live embers but many have switched over to charcoal
or propane and use a separate smoking chamber for a cold hickory smoke.
I can taste a difference between propane cooked BBQ versus hickory embers
fired cookers. Pix of Allen at his cooker on 06-28-14:
Pix of my brother Allen and Rachel Myers taken in Oct. 1968:
One of my brother in laws, Boyce Adcock is a Grill Master too when it
comes to BBQing Pork and/or chicken. He uses mostly charcoal and turns
out a first quality product. Inserted a few pixs of Boyce BBQing at
the Policeman's River Lodge on 12-23-06 for an annual Adcock family
Christmas Party:
The ole hand meat grinder goes a lot faster than the meat cleaver when
you have half a dozen more of Boston Butts to chop!
This BBQing was done outside and they have run out of daylight! We
had a great feast and party.
Web published updated pixs on 09-02-14 by Bill aka Mickey Porter.
PULLED PORK BBQ 07-25-17
The Ladies of the Wadesboro Church of God asked me to do some pulled pork
bbq for a luncheon luau they were catering to the
Wadesboro High School
Alumni on 07-26-17, of which I agreed.
I had three Boston butts that weighed approx. 28 lbs. if memory is
correct and coated them a couple days in advance with yellow mustard and a
very heavy coating of my Wild Bill's Meat Rub. They were lightly
tented with aluminum foil in my basement game refrigerator until the morning
of 07-25-17.
I got the ugly drum smoker going around 0700 hours and placed the three
Boston butts with the fat cap side down (facing the heat source) on the rack
and let the ugly drum smoker do its thing. I had at least 12 pounds of
Kingsford Original Charcoal in the fire basket and topped it off with
ignited charcoal embers which filled up a standard Weber charcoal chimney.
I kept the temperature around 275 degrees and later let it get down to a
little over 250 degrees F. and the Boston butts stayed in the ugly drum
smoker until around 4:30 PM. The internal temperature of one was 198
degrees F. and I believe the other one was a little over 190 degrees F.
and didn't have a digital thermometer probe in the other one, but the
shoulder blade bone was sticking a good ways out indicative that the meat
was done.
Those are some "beautimous" looking Boston butts.
I had to grin at myself when I was handling one of the Boston butts in
our kitchen getting ready to do some shredding of the pork with a couple
forks. I got hold of the bone and lifted the Boston butt from the
aluminum roster pan and the meat fell from the bone just by its own weight.
Yes, I did a little sampling of the dark outer crust aka bark on those
Boston butts....grin if you must!
That pulled pork has a very deep pronounced pink smoke ring in the
meat! You don't get that pink smoke ring using gas only and/or in the
oven.
There is 17.5 lbs. of pulled pork bbq in the plastic lug and added some
finishing sauce to it, of which the bbq was outstanding!
Web page updated by Bill aka Mickey Porter on 07-28-17 and 01-25-19.
PULLED PORK BBQ 07-07-2023
J. W. Barbour, one of our Wadesboro Church of God members here in
Wadesboro, NC was asked about doing some BBQ in crock pot(s) for about 40 to
50 people and I volunteered to do the Boston butts for him in my UDS.
I had JW to bring the four (4) large Boston butts over on 07-06-2023 and
coated each with some yellow mustard and applied a generous coating of
Wild Bill's Meat
Rub on each of them. I placed them in my basement game
refrigerator and took them out around 11:30 PM and placed them in the UDS
aka Ugly Drum Smoker and had the temperature running around 300 degrees and
it tapered off to around 275.
The Boston butts were kept in the UDS for around 11 hours and the
internal temperature was 190 degrees F. JW was going to help pull the
pork, but he was cutting his yard grass and didn't get my call until I
started pulling the last Boston Butt.
The UDS is coughing charcoal smoke pretty good. I have two
digital probes in two of the butts and a gauge monitoring the UDS internal
temperature.
The Boston butts are about ready to remove from the UDS.
JW weighted the pulled pork and it was 25 pounds. I told JW,
normally one pound of pulled pork will feed four people if they are not big
eaters, since you have other things with the pulled pork such as baked
beans, slaw, fries, hush puppies, etc.
Above pixs taken with my Obamaphone (Galaxy A13) which is not that great
a quality, but passable.
Web page updated by Bill aka Mickey Porter on 07-15-2023.
PULLED PORK BBQ 07-21-2023
I had four (4) Boston butts frozen and thawed them out on 07-19-2023 and
coated them with prepared yellow mustard and a good dusting of Wild Bill's
Meat Rub on each of them. I left them in the basement game
refrigerator until about 8:45 PM on the 20th and placed them in the UDS
aka Ugly Drum Smoker which had the charcoal ignited and left them until
around 8:15 the following morning on the 21st. The Boston butts
weighted approximately 35 pounds +- and the finished product was 20.75
pounds of pulled pork BBQ.
The ugly drum smoker with the Boston butts ready to take off and start
"pulling pork." The internal temperature was a little over 200
degrees.
This is a pix of the first one taken off the UDS and it was easy to pull
aka shred using two regular table forks.
I left a good amount of "bark"
with the pulled pork. As evidenced by the pix, there is a good smoke
ring on the outside surface of the pulled pork. You can't get this
smoke ring using a gas cooker!
The above 20.75 pounds of pulled pork with my
BBQ Sauce
added commonly called a finishing sauce.
The pulled pork BBQ was placed in the game refrigerator in our basement
and later vacuum sealed in about one (1) pound packages to be frozen for
later usage.
Web page updated by Bill aka Mickey Porter on 07-22-2023.
LEAVING ON A
SPIRITUAL NOTE
If you do not know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, please take this
moment to accept him by Faith into your Life, whereby Salvation will be
attained.
Ephesians 2:8 - 2:9 8 For by grace are ye saved through faith;
and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God: 9 Not of works, lest
any man should boast.
Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the
evidence of things not seen.”
Romans 10:17 “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
word of God.”
Open this
link about faith in the King James Bible.
Romans 10:9 “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord
Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the
dead, thou shalt be saved.”
Open this
link of Bible Verses About Salvation, King
James Version Bible (KJV).
Hebrews 4:12 “For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and
sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of
soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the
thoughts and intents of the heart.”
Romans 6:23 “For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is
eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Romans 3:23 “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of
God;”
Micah 6:8 “He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth
the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk
humbly with thy God?”
Philippians 4:13 "I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me."