Welcome to the EGGhead Forum - a great place to visit and packed with tips and EGGspert advice! You can also join the conversation and get more information and amazing kamado recipes by following Big Green Egg to Experience our World of Flavor™ at:
Want to see how the EGG is made? Click to Watch
Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Pinterest | Youtube | Vimeo
Share your photos by tagging us and using the hashtag #BigGreenEgg.
Share your photos by tagging us and using the hashtag #BigGreenEgg.
Want to see how the EGG is made? Click to Watch
Pork timing for 4th
Options
alexwolf1216
Posts: 112
My dilemma:
I purchased the 2 pack of pork shoulders for a 4th of July get together. It was 13.5lb combined, looks to be about equal. We will be serving around 3-4PM. I cant decide if I should start them tonight or just wake up early. What are your thoughts?
I purchased the 2 pack of pork shoulders for a 4th of July get together. It was 13.5lb combined, looks to be about equal. We will be serving around 3-4PM. I cant decide if I should start them tonight or just wake up early. What are your thoughts?
Comments
-
I just bought the same thing! I will be watching did you buy at Costco?
-
I did, was a great deal.
-
If Costco-then they are boneless-you may want to tie each to hold some shape for the cook. That said, each will cook at its own pace. But given you can FTC (foil, towels and cooler) a finished butt for 4-6 hours you are much better served by estimating long and if it all works-you finish early and don't stress with "time to eat and food not ready". I plan on 2 hrs/# at a calibrated dome of 260*F(+/-) and that works. If you can monitor both butts as you get close to the finish-line. They will very likely not finish at even close to the same time. And don't sweat small (+/- 20*F) temperature swings. Remember the feedback loop to any air flow changes is your thermo and that takes a while. Enjoy the journey.Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood. # 38 for the win. Life is too short for light/lite beer! Seems I'm livin in a transitional period.
-
Yes, I tied them up and they are in the fridge slathered in mustard and rub. I calibrated the dome and have a Maverick, so I think I will start around midnight and let them go. 260 dome it is and 195-200 and the butter test is where I will pull. Thank you.
-
One other thing that you should consider-make sure to use a drip pan on your platesetter or whatever you use for the indirect set-up and use spacers under the pan to create an air gap so the drippings don't become burnt offerings. FWIW-Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood. # 38 for the win. Life is too short for light/lite beer! Seems I'm livin in a transitional period.
-
I've got a pair of to-be-rubbed Costco shoulders in the fridge and just fired the Egg up, too. Planning the usual indirect at 250F dome overnight. We'll get everything settled in and stable around 10:00 pm and hit the hay and wake up when we wake up, prolly around 5 or 6 am and check. OK, so might get up once between and check. Whatever, not going to worry much. When we're done we'll foil and rest either in a cooler or a crock pot on low and pull around 3:00pm. Agree with lou on the drip pan, makes for better smoke. Happy Birthday, U.S.A.!!!!
-
And so they're on, stable at 250F dome at 9:15 pm. Off we go, into the wild blue yonderrrrrrrr...... 'night!
-
On they went at 12:10. I placed my foiled drip pan on the feet. Got my trusty maverick by the bed, lets hope it doesnt go off tonight.
-
I need a maverick!
-
Ugh I am having issues for the first time with temp. I have the bottom open more than usual, and the vents on top are fully open yet I am barely maintaining 200. Must have something to do with the lump. Looks like it may be a long night.
-
As I said above we put 'em on at 9:15 last night and are now sitting here at 7:15 a.m., ten hours later, dome at 225F, both shoulders perfectly stalled at 165F. We'll let 'em ride for a few hours and if they continue to stall we'll push to be done NLT noon and throw 'em in the cooler.
-
Alex - How'd you put your lump in? I 'arrange' mine for long cooks. I stack the long thin ones on the grate first, between the holes. Then start laying on large pieces with chunks of hickory. And the smaller pieces go up top. Seems to burn consistent that way overnight.
-
@LizzieNeed? No. Nice to have? Sure. Get good and temp control with the vents and your EGG will ride through just about anything. If it is windy I just turn the EGG so that the opening does not face the wind. It takes a little time but the EGG is forgiving and will always be there for you to practice.DavidBBQ since 2010 - Oh my, what I was missing.
-
As noted above, we arranged the lump, set the Egg up indirect and stable at 250F dome and threw the two Costco boneless shoulders on at 9:15 pm. At 10:00 pm Egg was stable at 250F dome and went to bed. Checked Egg temp at 12:45 am and it was 225F. Checked Egg temp again at 3:15 am and it was 200F. Checked Egg temp again at 7:15 am and it was 225F. Right now at 8:15 am it is still 225F. No vent adjustments have been made since starting. The Egg fluctuates some but not significantly. We set it to run 250F dome so that it would fluctuate between 200 and 250 without going too high or too low or out.
-
Stalled at 165F IT at 8:15 am. Get 'em done, get 'em in the cooler!
-
I arranged the lump with large pieces on the bottom, then wood, then medium pieces. I got the fire up to 200 around 2AM, which is when I went to sleep. Maverick read 275 this AM, and now they are both at 189. I just woke up and cut the temp down. I am at 266 and falling. I am hoping I can slow this down for a few hours still.
-
I should mention dome is at 300. DOH....
-
I arranged the lump with large pieces on the bottom, then wood, then medium pieces. I got the fire up to 200 around 2AM, which is when I went to sleep. Maverick read 275 this AM, and now they are both at 189. I just woke up and cut the temp down. I am at 266 and falling. I am hoping I can slow this down for a few hours still.
You may see another stall somewhere in the low 190's that will help delay the cook. Sometimes it can take 3-4 hours to get from 190-195. Hopefully you have this happen. Happy B'day USA!
Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood. # 38 for the win. Life is too short for light/lite beer! Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. -
At some point I raise dome to 300F and push through the stall, when I get within two hours.
-
It hit 195 briefly, then the temp came down at grate to 200. I think I may have stacked the lump poorly because the bottom is open an inch or so, anything less and the fire starts to choke. Meat came down to 187 so I am bumping it back up to 250ish grate and should be ready for lunch.
-
Had to add some lump to bump to 285F - 300F to finish, 1st one in the cooler, second one about one pm.
-
These came out amazing. Here are the pics:
Categories
- All Categories
- 182.8K EggHead Forum
- 15.7K Forum List
- 459 EGGtoberfest
- 1.9K Forum Feedback
- 10.3K Off Topic
- 2.2K EGG Table Forum
- 1 Rules & Disclaimer
- 9K Cookbook
- 12 Valentines Day
- 91 Holiday Recipes
- 223 Appetizers
- 516 Baking
- 2.4K Beef
- 88 Desserts
- 165 Lamb
- 2.4K Pork
- 1.5K Poultry
- 30 Salads and Dressings
- 320 Sauces, Rubs, Marinades
- 543 Seafood
- 175 Sides
- 121 Soups, Stews, Chilis
- 36 Vegetarian
- 100 Vegetables
- 313 Health
- 293 Weight Loss Forum