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First Smoke - Want to get it right!


 
I picked up a used 18" WSM at an estate sale and want to smoke my first pork shoulder this coming weekend. I bought a Maverick 732 and am going to do the eyelet mod for the probes later tonight.

Should I clean the smoker first? It looks pretty new for being 14 years old.

What about the pork shoulder? Do I inject it with anything in advance of the cook?

Any advice would be greatly appreciated. My wife thinks I have gone overboard with the grilling and smoking thing!
 
Well, it does sound like you are on the right track.
You might check the inside of the lid for flaky looking black stuff, if so hit it with a brush and a hose.
The food grills should probly get washed down with a little soap and water, then with laundry bleach, and rinse well.

The pork butt is a great first cook.
I like to trim off any large chunks of external fat. I tie it up so it's easier to handle. I like to use a bit of oil on on the meat before I rub, and then salt it a bit. You might proceed with caution here, if the butt has been 'enhanced', it will show on the label. If so be sparing with the salt.
Once the salt is on, I apply a generous portion of rub, wrap it up in saran and let it rest in the fridge overnight, but I get to cook all day long. Your circumstance may be different. Let it rest in the rub as long as is practical for your situation.
When I start the WSM stuff, I take the meat out of the fridge and let it sit room temp, while getting the pit ready.
I use a full ring of Kingsford blue bag, with 4-5 chunks of whatever wood buried in. I have a few fruit trees, so I use my own wood...apple cherry, plum, pear, sugar maple.
I light about 20 coals in the chimney and pour it on, then add another chunk of wood. (I like smoke). I then put it all together, with a clay saucer. If you use water, just be sure to replenish after 2-3 hours or so.The pit will hit 220 in about 1/2 hour. All bottom vents go shut, aiming for a temp 240-260.
The meat gets a bit more rub and goes on immediately when the pit is assembled. Probe in the meat, probe just inside the lid vent, which is wide open.
When meat temp hits 190 and steadily climbing, I will probe the meat with a fork. If it goes in AND OUT with no resistance, You're there. Off the grill and rest for at least 1/2 hour to an hour.
Pull,mix in that lovely bark serve with sauce of choice.
I am only able to concentrate on this 'cuz I am stuffed with first time attempt at Cornell Cheekon. Yum.
 
What Mike said should give you outstanding results. Like he said - "The pork butt is a great first cook". I have cooked them with trimmed fat and without any trimming. Both came out great but untrimmed means you will have to discard the fat as you pull the pork. I use Chris Lilly's rub and inject. If you want to use it do a search and you'll find the recipe or ask and I, or someone, can post it here. My last cook was with the rub only and it still tasted great although my wife noticed the difference in taste. I use one piece of hickory and 3 of Oak and the smoke flavor is not overpowering. The folks here have drummed this into my head. It's done when it's done so internal temp just tells you when to start checking for tenderness. I probe the meat in several places to check tenderness with a digital meat thermometer. When it's really soft I take it off the cooker, double wrap it in heavy duty foil, put it in a cooler full of towels, and rest it for at least 30 minutes. I've rested it for 4 hours and it was almost too hot to handle when I took it out of the foil.

You have taken a great first step to getting it right. You asked the question and that's one reason this board exists. You might also read Chris's explanation of cooking a shoulder/butt on the main site. You'll do fine and the meat will be great.
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Someone, I think it was Keri, posted this years ago. I heat the inject and stir it to dissolve the sugar. I then let it cool down before injecting. 12 to 24 hours before I cook I inject the butt (Boston Butt that is
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), then I rub it, put it in a 2 gallon Ziplock back and keep it in the fridge until I'm ready to put it on the WSM. Here tis.

Chris Lilly's Six-Time World Championship Pork Shoulder Rub
Makes 2 cups.
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
1 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon black pepper
Combine all ingredients and mix thoroughly.


Chris Lilly Pork Shoulder Injection
Makes 2 cups
3/4 cup apple juice
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup white sugar
1/4 cup table salt
2 Tablespoons Worcestershire Sauce
Combine all ingredients and stir until sugar and salt are dissolved.

If you use it I hope it works for you. There's a ton of people on here that know more than I do.
 
Chris, our host, has a good page on the site that covers injection and it also has the recipe. Go here He has a picture of the injector on there. Someone said WalMart carries them. Bass Pro carries them and some grocery stores do.
 
OK, one last question for now! The Farmland pork butt I bought is "enhanced". Should I still inject it? Should I buy a different pork butt? Maybe I am over-thinking this!
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by Stewart Ellenberg:
OK, one last question for now! The Farmland pork butt I bought is "enhanced". Should I still inject it? Should I buy a different pork butt? Maybe I am over-thinking this! </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

I wouldn't inject it since it already has a bunch of water and salt in it. I wouldn't use salt in your rub either. Personally I don't find that injecting a butt makes much difference. If you want to add flavour to the pork do it when you pull it. Add a bit of your rub and a dash of apple juice, if you want apple flavour, at that time.
 
Agree with the above. Don't inject an enhanced piece of meat unless you know what it was enhanced with.
For future, try to buy straight up pork butt from your butcher, supermarket butcher or big box store if available.
The meat is your canvas, the additions are your art (wow, I'm Zen today).

JDH
 

 

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