All-
Well the weekend and pig roast has come and gone. I don’t want to say it was a failure but we are currently rethinking what went wrong.
To recap:
- Followed the directions up thread pretty closely however we did not get the fire started the night prior. Instead we started the burn at around 8AM and then ultimately put the pig in around 10:45.
- The pig was 64lbs. We brined it and then used a rub. Not sure the rub would have done anything. The stuffing of oranges, pineapples, garlic, and onion we would do again.
- We used two huge bags of charcoal to get the fire going then added tons of firewood. I wish I had a measurement for the amount of firewood.
- We had bricks in the bottom of the pit then coals then fresh corn stalks then the pig which was wrapped in banana leaves/wet burlap/chicken wire. More stalks on top of the pig. Then a canvas over those stalks and then we finally buried it all.
We watched the temp rise from about 53 to about 110 over the first couple hours and were feeling decent about the production. Then about 4PM we realized it had more or less stalled so we dug up the pig to check. After a couple different temp readings we realized it was on average about 115 and that there was almost no more heat from below. So we pull out all the stalks and threw in two more bags of charcoal (from the place at North/Halsted) and got those blazing. At peak heat we put the stalks back down, pig back in, and recovered everything.
Seemed like we were doing well after this as we watched the temp then rise over the next 2 hours or so to 163. We thought we had won this battle so we dug it up again and then ran some temp checks elsewhere on the pig and realized for some reason the hind leg had gotten much hotter and the rest of the pig was only about 125-130. So we buried it again. Watched it for about another 90 minutes and it didn’t budge. We were out of firewood and time.
Pulled it / butchered / and finished on the grill. The meat was ultimately good but nothing worth that effort.
In hindsight my thoughts:
1. Start fire the night before.
2. Have a bed of hot coals that are at least 12” deep. I think at the beginning we may have lacked this. This means much more firewood than we had.
3. We used bricks that were about 5” wide and 1” thick. We lined the bottom and sides up about a foot. We did NOT put any rocks or bricks on top of the coals. I think this may be an issue.
4. Starting fire temp may have been too low initially. I did one surface temp read and got 450 but thats my only data point.
5. We were in a beach sand pit and had tons of sand seeping in. Not a huge deal but I think over time it may have diluted the heat focus from the fire. Again not a game changer but was annoying.
6. We may have had too much insulation on the pig.
Would love to hear any thoughts. It was a bummer but we still had a ton of fun doing it all.