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Tootsie Tomanetz’s (Snows Bbq) Pork Steaks
The Cen-Tex Smoker
Posts: 23,132
I think I have seen these on here a few times but I have never done them. Was in HEB earlier this week and they had a case full of pork steaks already cut for the holiday weekend. Figured that was the perfect time to give them a try. It’s basically a 2” thick steak cut from the shoulder. These were boneless which I liked.
Rub is 60/40 16 mesh black pepper/salt. Standard Texas stuff there.
She makes a mop sauce which is referenced in the article link below. It does add a little kick and butter flavor so make the mop!
Setup was raised direct at 275 with post oak chunks found on the ranch and cut down to size.
Cook took 4 hours 30 minutes. I flipped halfway, she flips much later but she cooks on a much different rig (live fire under a grate sitting at 30”’off the ground).
These are incredible and so easy. I literally
mopped once an hour, flipped once and that’s it. Hard to describe how good they are. Like ribs, burnt ends, and steak all in one bite. Daniel Vaughan (the BBQ editor of Texas Monthly magazine who gives out all the rankings) said it’s one of, if not his favorite bites of BBQ in the state. I have to agree. Not sure what took me so long but this is definitely in the rotation now. The best thing about it is you can cook them for 2 people or 20 and have amazing BBQ in 4-5 hours. Highly recommended.
mopped once an hour, flipped once and that’s it. Hard to describe how good they are. Like ribs, burnt ends, and steak all in one bite. Daniel Vaughan (the BBQ editor of Texas Monthly magazine who gives out all the rankings) said it’s one of, if not his favorite bites of BBQ in the state. I have to agree. Not sure what took me so long but this is definitely in the rotation now. The best thing about it is you can cook them for 2 people or 20 and have amazing BBQ in 4-5 hours. Highly recommended.
Link: https://www.texasmonthly.com/bbq/tootsie-tomanetzs-pork-steak/
I don’t think that one is paywalled but if it is I’ll add the recipe here.
I don’t think that one is paywalled but if it is I’ll add the recipe here.
The only change I made was I glazed them with Franklin vinegar sauce right at the end. I love it on pork and it did not disappoint this time either. You can basically take any sauce you like that is not syrupy sweet and cut it 50/50 with ACV to make something similar.
That little chef snack up front got snagged about an hour in. I knew then we were in for a treat.
We just ate the steaks off the board with no sides so no hero plates shot today
Hope you guys and gals are having a great 4th!
Edit to add: I didn’t check for internal temp. When they darkened up I just poked them to see how tender they were. When they felt like ribs throughout, I pulled them. I’m guessing they were 180-190 based on the texture. It’s not pulled pork but it’s very tender to slice.
Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX
Comments
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Great excuse for another road trip to Lexington.
Thanks for the above-always a great thread when you roll in.
Gonna have to give this a go.
Happy birthday 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. -
One note on the mop: I cooked 3 steaks so I made a 1/4 recipe of the mop from the article and I still had 90% of it left over. You don’t need much
Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
This is going to be like GameStop for pork steaks, the price will open at a new high tomorrow.
I'm in, next chance I get for a lazy weekend cook.Not a felon -
Thanks, another classic @The Cen-Tex Smoker recipe to try! I wondered why they took so much longer than the classic double cut pork chops but I guess as it's from the shoulder it just takes longer to cook so the interconnective tissue breaks down. I assume these are pork shoulder steaks? I'll see if I can get some here. I can get Franklin's sauce here, although I did find a deconstruction recipe for how to make it.
I assume that's raised direct in the large? I'm wondering if the MMX would give enough clearance, even when raised.-----------------------------------------------------------------------
| Cooking and blogging with a Large and Minimax in deepest, darkest England-shire
| My food blog ... BGE and other stuff ... http://www.thecooksdigest.co.uk
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Looks and sounds great 😋Greensboro North Carolina
When in doubt Accelerate.... -
Legume said:This is going to be like GameStop for pork steaks, the price will open at a new high tomorrow.
I'm in, next chance I get for a lazy weekend cook.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
Stormbringer said:Thanks, another classic @The Cen-Tex Smoker recipe to try! I wondered why they took so much longer than the classic double cut pork chops but I guess as it's from the shoulder it just takes longer to cook so the interconnective tissue breaks down. I assume these are pork shoulder steaks? I'll see if I can get some here. I can get Franklin's sauce here, although I did find a deconstruction recipe for how to make it.
I assume that's raised direct in the large? I'm wondering if the MMX would give enough clearance, even when raised.Aaron Franklin has his “sweet sauce” recipe (that’s the “Texas” sauce in the stores/online) on YouTube. He cuts that 50/50 with acv to make the vinegar sauce.Cant wait to hear what you think. We loved them. Ate them right off the board with nothing else. We just dipped them in more vinegar sauce and ate them with our hands like savages.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
Excellent. I may try this on Sunday funday."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
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@JohnInCarolina where do you think you will find them?Johns Is, SC
L/MiniMax Eggs -
A quick search showed plenty of guides and videos online for how to cut a shoulder into steaks. I may have to go that route, not sure I'll be able to find them pre cut in a store near me.Not a felon
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Legume said:A quick search showed plenty of guides and videos online for how to cut a shoulder into steaks. I may have to go that route, not sure I'll be able to find them pre cut in a store near me.-----------------------------------------------------------------------
| Cooking and blogging with a Large and Minimax in deepest, darkest England-shire
| My food blog ... BGE and other stuff ... http://www.thecooksdigest.co.uk
----------------------------------------------------------------------- -
The Cen-Tex Smoker said:Stormbringer said:Thanks, another classic @The Cen-Tex Smoker recipe to try! I wondered why they took so much longer than the classic double cut pork chops but I guess as it's from the shoulder it just takes longer to cook so the interconnective tissue breaks down. I assume these are pork shoulder steaks? I'll see if I can get some here. I can get Franklin's sauce here, although I did find a deconstruction recipe for how to make it.
I assume that's raised direct in the large? I'm wondering if the MMX would give enough clearance, even when raised.Aaron Franklin has his “sweet sauce” recipe (that’s the “Texas” sauce in the stores/online) on YouTube. He cuts that 50/50 with acv to make the vinegar sauce.Cant wait to hear what you think. We loved them. Ate them right off the board with nothing else. We just dipped them in more vinegar sauce and ate them with our hands like savages.
I wonder if this thread will be going in 13 years time.-----------------------------------------------------------------------
| Cooking and blogging with a Large and Minimax in deepest, darkest England-shire
| My food blog ... BGE and other stuff ... http://www.thecooksdigest.co.uk
----------------------------------------------------------------------- -
booksw said:@JohnInCarolina where do you think you will find them?"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
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Solid and appreciate the narrative @The Cen-Tex SmokerVisalia, Ca @lkapigian
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Stormbringer said:The Cen-Tex Smoker said:Stormbringer said:Thanks, another classic @The Cen-Tex Smoker recipe to try! I wondered why they took so much longer than the classic double cut pork chops but I guess as it's from the shoulder it just takes longer to cook so the interconnective tissue breaks down. I assume these are pork shoulder steaks? I'll see if I can get some here. I can get Franklin's sauce here, although I did find a deconstruction recipe for how to make it.
I assume that's raised direct in the large? I'm wondering if the MMX would give enough clearance, even when raised.Aaron Franklin has his “sweet sauce” recipe (that’s the “Texas” sauce in the stores/online) on YouTube. He cuts that 50/50 with acv to make the vinegar sauce.Cant wait to hear what you think. We loved them. Ate them right off the board with nothing else. We just dipped them in more vinegar sauce and ate them with our hands like savages.
I wonder if this thread will be going in 13 years time.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
I just had a thought- this would make an amazing Char Siu recipe with the right glaze.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX
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I've done this so many times and I agree it's a fantastic cook! I will have to try the Franklin sauce at the end to mix it up!
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JohnInCarolina said:booksw said:@JohnInCarolina where do you think you will find them?Johns Is, SC
L/MiniMax Eggs -
For some reason my butcher already had these bad boys cut:
It must be something in the water! Smoked them in the BGE for about 5 hrs, with mopping every hour.
I may have pulled them off a bit too soon. My IT was around 175 in some spots, much higher in others. So some parts were a bit tougher than others.
But these are very good. The flavor is pretty smoky and the sauce I used to finish (an Eastern Carolina vinegar) added a solid kick. The bark is the action for sure.
Definitely recommend trying these. Cooks don’t get much easier."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike -
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I didn’t temp mine but poked them until they were tender all over. Some parts did take longer than others.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX
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The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I didn’t temp mine but poked them until they were tender all over."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
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JohnInCarolina said:The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I didn’t temp mine but poked them until they were tender all over.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX
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The Cen-Tex Smoker said:JohnInCarolina said:The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I didn’t temp mine but poked them until they were tender all over."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
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JohnInCarolina said:The Cen-Tex Smoker said:JohnInCarolina said:The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I didn’t temp mine but poked them until they were tender all over.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX
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OK I am going to find these 2" pork steaks. Help me understand why pork chops would be dry and tough above a certain temp but these can go low and slow to a higher temp and get softer. I am thinking it is a similar thing with beef but I am having a hard time putting my head around the space between 'dry' and 'fall off the bone'Johns Is, SC
L/MiniMax Eggs -
booksw said:OK I am going to find these 2" pork steaks. Help me understand why pork chops would be dry and tough above a certain temp but these can go low and slow to a higher temp and get softer. I am thinking it is a similar thing with beef but I am having a hard time putting my head around the space between 'dry' and 'fall off the bone'Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX
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Today’s vocabulary word is unctuous.
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I'll have to try these soon as I definitely am in the "pro unctuousness" crowd.
When one gets served "pork tips" - is that just one of the these pork steaks cut into smaller pieces?XXL BGE, Karebecue, Klose BYC, Chargiller Akorn Kamado, Weber Smokey Mountain, Grand Turbo gasser, Weber Smoky Joe, and the wheelbarrow that my grandfather used to cook steaks from his cattle
San Antonio, TX
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I'll be giving these a go this week. Looking for advice when I visit the butcher, should I request they be cut from the shoulder or butt?
LBGE, LBGE-PTR, 22" Weber, Coleman 413GGreat Plains, USA
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