Bubba Tom's Barbecue
Yield
1 recipePrep
20 minCook
8 hrsReady
9 hrsIngredients
Amount | Measure | Ingredient | Features |
---|---|---|---|
5 | pounds |
pork shoulder
roasted |
|
4 | tablespoons |
cayenne pepper
flakes |
|
8 | each |
garlic bulb
|
* |
Sauce | |||
12 | ounces |
apple cider vinegar
|
|
2 | tablespoons |
cayenne pepper
flakes |
|
1 | tablespoon |
salt
|
|
2 | cups |
water
|
Ingredients
Amount | Measure | Ingredient | Features |
---|---|---|---|
2.3 | kg |
pork shoulder
roasted |
|
6E+1 | ml |
cayenne pepper
flakes |
|
8 | each |
garlic bulb
|
* |
Sauce | |||
346.8 | ml/g |
apple cider vinegar
|
|
3E+1 | ml |
cayenne pepper
flakes |
|
15 | ml |
salt
|
|
473 | ml |
water
|
Directions
First, get yourself some pork shoulders or Boston Butt roasts, as many as your smoker will hold comfortably.
I use a Brinkmann Professional Pit Smoker with an offset firebox, but you can do this with a vertical Brinkmann water smoker as well.
The key is providing a moist, smoky, indirect heat for a long period of time.
What I do is put a bag of charcoal in the firebox, open the vents, light it, and let it burn down to coals.
Then I add wood (generally oak, since hickory is scarce up here)--two parts wet (soaked) wood to one part dry--regulate the dampers, and put the shoulders or butts, fat side up, in the cooking chamber.
Beneath the meat I put a drip pan half-filled with apple cider vinegar.
You must keep the heat between 180 to 260 degrees throughout the smoking process; the optimum range is 220 to 240 degrees.
Normally, I'll add apple wood to the firebox as well, and I always add between 5 to 7 whole heads of garlic during the process.
Keep the firebox fed and a good smoke going for between 8 to 10 hours.
Do not open the cooking chamber to baste the meat--the only time you open the cooking chamber is when the temperature spikes above 260 degrees, and you open it only long enough to bring the temperature back in the proper range.
By the time the smoking period is finished, the outside of the pork will have a golden amber to dark brown crust.
Now, take the meat and put it in a covered Dutch oven.
If it's too dark outside to continue, preheat your indoor stoves' oven to just under 300 degrees; otherwise, just raise the temperature in the cooking chamber a like amount.
Get a quart-sized Mason jar; fill it halfway with apple cider vinegar, add one (or more) teaspoons of red pepper flakes, and fill the rest of the jar with water.
Dump this into the Dutch oven with the pork, cover, and cook until the meat falls from the bone, about 2 more hours or so.
When the meat is done, let it cool a bit.