Chris Lilly's Six-time World Championship Pork Shoulder injection and rub


 

Keri C

TVWBB Wizard
* Exported from MasterCook *

Chris Lilly's Six-time World Championship Pork Shoulder

Recipe By : Chris Lilly of Big Bob Gibson's
Serving Size : 0 Preparation Time :0:00
Categories :

Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
For the pork shoulder rub
1/4 cup dark brown sugar
1/2 cup white sugar
1/2 cup paprika
1/3 cup garlic salt
1/3 cup kosher salt
1 tablespoon chili powder
1 teaspoon oregano leaves
1 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon black pepper
-----------
Pork injection
3/4 cup apple juice
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup salt
2 tablespoons Worcestershire
------------
1 whole pork shoulder (approximately 16 pounds)
1 bottle Big Bob Gibson Championship Red Sauce (or substitute your favorite BBQ sauce)

Inject pork shoulder evenly with injection solution. Apply a generous amount of rub onto meat. Pat so the rub will adhere. Place in a smoker and cook with indirect heat for 16 hours on 225°F. Serve with sauce on the side or paint shoulder with sauce the last 20 minutes of cooking. When done, the pork should pull off the bones easily. The internal temperature of the pork should reach 195°F.
 
Women's intuition, dear heart, women's intuition.
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Keri C
 
What does your intuition tell you would be a good sauce recipe to go with this for pulled pork sandwiches?

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I am going to use this recipe as the basis for my Burning Man 72-butt rub.
 
Keri,
Have you done this rub yet? I was wondering if substituting turbanado sugar for the brown sugar would be wise? I haven't had much success with drying out brown sugar, the consistancy seems poor, and turbanado seems like a good substitute. As one of our gurus of Q, do you have any opinions on that?
 
Hi Keri -

I'm new to the board(been lurkin' for a while) and I'm considering making this recipe, this weekend. I've made the Renonwed Mr.Brown(fantastic) - but I have two ?'s for you:

1. Do you apply the rub any time prior to putting on the WSM - for example, the Renowned Mr. Brown had it applied 12 hours prior, and then again before placing on WSM.

2. Can you give an idea of how much injection to inject? (I'm a complete newbie with injections.)

Thanks,

Joe

Here's a pic of the Renowned Mr. Brown:
081405002.jpg
 
Erich, yes, you could substitute turbinado for the brown sugar with no problem. I've used both.

Joe, I've gotten to the point where, most times, I will apply my rubs, go build the fire while they sit, and put the meat on without letting it sit long at all. I DO let it sit long enough to form a liquidy layer over the meat, but since I usually do a mustard slather before the rub, that forms quickly.

Since Chris specified that the recipe is enough for 1 16-lb pork shoulder, that means that it will also suffice for two pork butts as well. I've seen Chris specify to use 1/2 oz of injection per lb of meat, but the way I inject, I'm lucky if half of what I inject actually stays in the meat. Thus... when I inject, I place each pork butt down into its own 2-gallon ziplock bag. I divide the total amount of injection made by the recipe and allow half to each butt. Keep the needle moving - you want to place liquid in as many small areas throughout the meat as possible, and not in one long streak. The bag will catch your overflow, and you can run it through the needle again.

Good luck!

Keri C
 
Thanks Keri!! I'm making this tomorrow - it's a 14 pounder(untrimmed weight). Going to show the in-laws what real BBQ is.
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I really appreciate the help!

Joe
 
14-lb??? That's a full shoulder, then, huh? I've done lots of butts, but have never done a full shoulder. That's a fine lookin' butt in the picture above. Fire up that digital camera and shoot a few of that shoulder - if you've been lurking, you know how we all love food ****...
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Keri C
 
It was so tightly packed that it was actually two seven pound shoulders(didn't realize). I took a pic of the package - but I caught the most heinous stomach virus from my one and a half y.o. son. It was horrible. But I still dragged my carcass up at 3:30am, cooked the shoulders at a steady ~230F for around 14hrs - the WSM is just unbelievable at holding a temp(did the Minion method). I was having a family get together - everyone absolutely raved about this pork! I was so sick I didn't pull it, but my MIL and wife did. Raves also about the Bastardized BBQ sauce too!

Thanks,

Joe F.
 
I used this recipe for a 20 lb whole fresh ham. Pulled off some of the fat strips so more smoke could permeate the meat. Took about 20 hours, turned out great. Cooked up a batch of the Basterdized bbq sauce too. Had the kids holding their nose, was pretty spicy, but delicous.

thanks for the great recipe!

jd
 
I used this recipe for a picnic shoulder and ribs yesterday. Everyone loved them! I did not use the injection or sauce, just the rub. Thanks for the recipe, this one is a keeper.

Jeff
 
Whoa...lets go back to the beginning...injecting meat is foreign territory for me...I DO want to try this hopefully within the next couple weeks...sounds great...

What do you use to inject the meat with? Is there a special kind of injector?
 
Yes, and they're known as meat injectors, marinade injectors, flavor injectors, etc. Google or go to Amazon and you'll find them at kitchen supply sites, Cajun sites, Cabela's, et al.

I can't say I've ever met an injected pork butt I liked but try it and see what you think.
 
I think my local grocery store has these pork shoulder's (Whole Fresh Picnic) on sale this week. Can anyone have a look at the picture below and confirm. I am not very familiar with this cut of pork, will it taste anything like a pork butt? How does this compare with a pork butt in taste, fat content, etc.

Is .99/lb a good price?

Thanks

porkshoulder.jpg
 
That pic makes it look as white as center-cut pork loin; it isn't. Picnic, the upper part of a foreleg is similar to butt, the upper part of the shoulder, to which it is attached unless separated by the meat cutter.

If the lower part of the leg (the shank or foreshank) is still attached then it is easy to recognize:

images


If it is somewhat trimmed one can still tell it's a picnic because of the narrow end:

boneinporkshoulderpicnic.jpg


If trimmed more and, especially, if the skin is removed, the picnic looks much more like a butt:


Trimmed, skinned picnic:

images


Butt:

Boneless_Shoulder_Butt-11.jpg


If bone-in, however, the picnic's bone is the round bone of the leg; the butt's is the flat bone of the shoulder blade.

The cooking approach and flavor of each are both quite similar. Some people prefer picnics over butts, some vice versa (like me).

Try it and see what you think. $.99/lb is about as low as one sees at Publix and is a decent price.

Welcome to the board.
 
<pre class="ip-ubbcode-code-pre"> What do you use to inject the meat with? Is there a special kind of injector? </pre>

You can buy the injectors in most grocery stores (at least around here), the same ones they use with the Cajun injection.

If you're going big, you can use a brine pump (about $100.00). I ordered mine off the web.

I know this is an older thread, but someone may run across it and have use for the update.
 

 

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