jimswside wrote:Heres a recap. Soaked the 3#
G Wiv wrote:jimswside wrote:Heres a recap. Soaked the 3#
Ahhh, I see, you are working with a 3-pound-corned beef, not a 14-15 pound full packer cut.
Pictures look good, though I wonder if I would find it salty. Best bring a few slices to my house for product testing, try and make it in time for lunch.![]()
Enjoy,
Gary
Attrill wrote:I tried something new with Pork Shoulder this weekend for a Derby party and it worked out really well. I basically used a variation on a Korean pork recipe I've done before for strips of pork tenderloin.
1 large piece of ginger (peeled and chopped)
6 garlic cloves (peeled and chopped)
saute in a pan for 5 minutes or so
Add 1/2 cup sake, 2 tbls rice vinegar, and drizzle with honey (about 1/4 cup)
Add 1/4 Soya
cook for a couple minutes, then add 4 pitted and sliced plums
then add hot spices to taste, I used red pepper flakes and a chopped chile
Let the whole thing simmer for 5-10 minutes and then puree with blender.
I marinated the shoulder overnight in that marinade and then smoked it at about 275 for 5 hours or so using a mix of RO Chef Select briquettes and plum wood.
This worked really well. I saved a lot of the marinade for basting and had about a cup or so left to mix in after it came out of the smoker Next time I will probably make more for mixing in after it has cooked, it could work great as a dipping sauce all on it's own.
jimswside wrote:
that sounds really good. How many pound shoulder did you do?
I am going to do a pok loin I mentioned upthread, and I am going to rub a Korean bulgogi sauce on it before stuffing with garlic, wrapping in banana leaves, and letting sit overnight. Then smoked using Cowboy lump, and hickory.
jimswside wrote:started my prep for MIM last night. Got the 5# boneless pork loin out of the cryovac, rinsed it with white vinegar, and cut about 30 slits in the fat cap. Wrapped it up, and put it back in the fridge. This morning at 6:00 I took the loin, and put it in a ziplock and added pineapple juice. It will marinate until I get home from work at 6:00. I will do the rest of the prep tonight(rub with bulgogi, stuff slits with garlic, cover with green onions, and wrap in banana leaf and refrigerate overnight until it goes on the smoker around 6:00 a.m. tomorrow.
I am still deciding if I want to put the rub on ym ribs tonight, or if I will have time tomorrow to do as I usually do, apply the rub approx. 30 mins before they go on the smoker. Either way they will be rinsed with white vinegar and pat dry before rubbing. They will go on the smoker around 7:30 - 8:00 tomorrow.
stevez wrote:It will be very interesting to see how this turns out. I'm curious how such a lean cut will hold up to that long of a cook. I'm looking forward to trying it tomorrow.
stevez wrote:jimswside wrote:started my prep for MIM last night. Got the 5# boneless pork loin out of the cryovac, rinsed it with white vinegar, and cut about 30 slits in the fat cap. Wrapped it up, and put it back in the fridge. This morning at 6:00 I took the loin, and put it in a ziplock and added pineapple juice. It will marinate until I get home from work at 6:00. I will do the rest of the prep tonight(rub with bulgogi, stuff slits with garlic, cover with green onions, and wrap in banana leaf and refrigerate overnight until it goes on the smoker around 6:00 a.m. tomorrow.
I am still deciding if I want to put the rub on ym ribs tonight, or if I will have time tomorrow to do as I usually do, apply the rub approx. 30 mins before they go on the smoker. Either way they will be rinsed with white vinegar and pat dry before rubbing. They will go on the smoker around 7:30 - 8:00 tomorrow.
It will be very interesting to see how this turns out. I'm curious how such a lean cut will hold up to that long of a cook. I'm looking forward to trying it tomorrow.
Attrill wrote:I tried something new with Pork Shoulder this weekend for a Derby party and it worked out really well. I basically used a variation on a Korean pork recipe I've done before for strips of pork tenderloin.
1 large piece of ginger (peeled and chopped)
6 garlic cloves (peeled and chopped)
saute in a pan for 5 minutes or so
Add 1/2 cup sake, 2 tbls rice vinegar, and drizzle with honey (about 1/4 cup)
Add 1/4 Soya
cook for a couple minutes, then add 4 pitted and sliced plums
then add hot spices to taste, I used red pepper flakes and a chopped chile
Let the whole thing simmer for 5-10 minutes and then puree with blender.
I marinated the shoulder overnight in that marinade and then smoked it at about 275 for 5 hours or so using a mix of RO Chef Select briquettes and plum wood.
This worked really well. I saved a lot of the marinade for basting and had about a cup or so left to mix in after it came out of the smoker Next time I will probably make more for mixing in after it has cooked, it could work great as a dipping sauce all on it's own.
jimswside wrote:some pics of my bbq from last weekend........
banana wrapped loin:
Attrill wrote:jimswside wrote:some pics of my bbq from last weekend........
banana wrapped loin:
Everything looks great!
How did the loin turn out? Did the slow cook dry it out at all? Did much smoke flavor get through the banana wrap? It looks delicious.
JoelF wrote:Trying my first real smoke today.
Posting in this thread rather than the "Low and Slow" threads to, well, hide from Gary.
I'm using lesson 1, but
* Only one chicken
* Off-brand Mojo Criollo -- no Goya where I was shopping
* Thought I had a lemon, but instead I'm using a whole lime instead of the half lemon per whole chicken
* Worst of all -- I've got this awful Meco smoker I've had on my patio for five years unused. No vent controls, no bottom dome, just an open bottom with a bowl for charcoal
Still, no briquettes, no lighter fluid, real hardwood charcoal and hickory chunks. So I'm hoping that the no-fail lesson one on a WSM can come out at least likely to be good in this configuration.
Maybe a pic later. No peeking for another hour and 20 minutes.
[later]
Came out delicious - nice strong flavor of smoke, a little citrus and brightness from the mojo. I could have left it on another 15 minutes, probably, some of the meat toward the bone was a little underdone. I see lesson 2 has some tricks for crispy skin -- I got fooled by the smoke color thinking this one was already crisp.
stevez wrote:What's that thing next to the stove/smoker with the gas bottle? Is that some kind of outdoor oven? What's that doing at a KCSB BBQ Contest?