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Serves 8 to 10
The day before you want to serve this dish, set out a Ziploc-type
plastic bag large enough to hold the pork shoulder. Measure into
the bag the rub ingredients: brown sugar; garlic powder; paprika;
white, black, and cayenne peppers; dry mustard; sage; thyme; and
allspice. Close the bag and shake the contents to mix the spices
well, pressing out any clumps of brown sugar between your fingers.
Pat the pork shoulder dry with a paper towel and place it in the
bag. Seal the bag, then shake and turn it until the meat is well
covered with the rub. Refrigerate, tightly closed, overnight.
Some 8 or 9 hours before you want to eat, take the pork in its
bag of spices from the refrigerator and let it rest at room temperature
while you fire up the smoker. Once the coals are glowing and you’ve
added smoking wood to the fire pan and hot water to the water pan,
transfer the picnic shoulder to the grill.
Smoke, covered, at 200 to 220 degrees F. for 3 to 4 hours, replenishing
the cooker’s wood and water supplies as needed. Then prepare to
start mopping. Pour the vinegar, corn oil, and Tabasco® or other
hot red pepper sauce into a medium-size stainless steel or flameproof
ceramic saucepan and whisk until well mixed. Baste the shoulder
with the mop, using a long-handled barbecue brush or a mop. If you’re
cooking a bone-in shoulder, be sure to work the mop in around the
bone where the meat has begun to separate from it. Continue to smoke
the picnic for another 4 to 5 hours, mopping the crusty black surface
every 30 minutes or so. A meat thermometer inserted into the thickest
part of the shoulder will have long since registered the 160 to
170 degrees F. recommended for pork, and by now, you’ll find, the
meat can be pulled apart into luscious, incredibly tender strands
all peppery around the edges.
Just before taking the shoulder from the grill, bring the liquid
remaining from the mop to a boil in its pan, simmer briefly, and
pour into a pitcher to pass around the table. Some folks like their
pulled pork really vinegary. Have soft buns handy for purists.
Note: If you're
new to smoking, click here for indirect smoking instructions.
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