Rich G
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Haven't used the rotisserie in a while, so I fired it up tonight for a rare summer family dinner.  While at the store today, I spied some bone-in center cut pork loin, so grabbed one for my cart.  I used this Southwestern Style Rotisserie Pork Loin recipe I found on the web (pretty much just coating the pork with a spice paste for a few hours to infuse some flavor, and create a crust base.)
I fired up a chimney of coals, and when those were lit up, I divided them into two charcoal baskets, dropped in a drip pan and started spinning. A little under an hour later, we were at 142 degrees in the coolest part of the roast, and it looked great:
		
		
	
	
		 
	
After a 10 minute rest, I carved it into slices after removing the ribs:
		 
	
We ate this paired up with some fresh yellow corn. As you can see, the roast turned out quite juicy, and it was very tasty. The paste made a nice crust on the outside, so I made sure that every bite had a bit of crust on the fork. Great stuff!
R
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			I fired up a chimney of coals, and when those were lit up, I divided them into two charcoal baskets, dropped in a drip pan and started spinning. A little under an hour later, we were at 142 degrees in the coolest part of the roast, and it looked great:
 
	After a 10 minute rest, I carved it into slices after removing the ribs:
 
	We ate this paired up with some fresh yellow corn. As you can see, the roast turned out quite juicy, and it was very tasty. The paste made a nice crust on the outside, so I made sure that every bite had a bit of crust on the fork. Great stuff!
R
 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		