So this past weekend my wife and I had a garage sale in order to get rid of some of the stuff her and I had accumulated over the years. Since we'd be in our garage all day without much else to do but barter with the neighbours, I thought it'd be a great chance to try another pork butt.
One thing I did differently this time than I did on other cooks is cook at OVER 250 degrees, rather than the 225-250 most people recommend. I figured it was a nice compromise between LNS and HH, and I wanted to get the butt done in time for dinner that night.
SO, I bought a bone-in Pork Butt (around 8lbs) and slathered it in my version of an All-Purpose rub. A little late, at 10:10, I started the smoker (Minion method, full charcoal grate with a full chimney of lit) and let it run for about 20 minutes to burn off a bit of the white smoke (I know this might not make a difference, but I like the idea of laying my meat in a hot smoker, ready to go) and then popped in 4 chunks of Apple Wood.
Anyway, put the meat on and probes in and got to selling junk!

Unfortunately, we got rain almost the entire morning and well into the afternoon so I had to do a bit of jury rigging with my windbreak and some blue SM I had on hand to keep the rain off it and temperatures steady.

I kept an eye on the temperature with my Maverick and made an effort to keep it around 260-270. I noticed the lid temp was showing over 300, but I just chalked that up to the differences everyone notes between their WSMs temperature gauge and ET-732 Mavericks. The main thing I took away from this was that the less concerned you are about how long your meat takes to cook, the higher the chances that you're going to get a better result!
At about 8:30 the meat was stalling at around 175ish and the pit temp was dropping steadily. I knew I was starting to run out of fuel because I hadn't HEAPED the grate like I had intended, and due to the hotter burning smoker I think I went through my coals a little quicker than I expected. I wanted to make sure I didn't leave anything to chance so not only did I add another full chimney of lit coals, but I foiled my butt as well.
Shortly after at about 10:00 (I had pulled the pit temp probe out and was just watching the meat temp probe) and saw that my meat was reading ~192 degrees. I went to the smoker and probed it....BUTTER, BABY!
Pulled it off (Almost dropped it, it was so soft) and let it rest on the kitchen counter for about 45 minutes while I watched the Sunday Nighter, and then came back and pulled it apart.
EASILY the tastiest, most well-cooked and aesthetically pleasing pork but I've done to date. I was a little concerned about the "Twist" test with the bone because there was a lot of meat stuck to it (YOu can see the crack in the shoulder in the pictures below...the whole bone-side of the shoulder was still attached to the bone, but the rest pulled right away from the remainded) but it proved to be an unfounded fear as the meat was tender and juicy all the way through.




Cliffs notes:
-8lb, bone-in Butt
-Trimmed fat cap
-Mustard + All Purpose Dry Rub
-Cold, rainy day (Had to establish windbreak for smoker)
-Full grate of Kingsford Blue
-Minion Method, allowing a slight 20-30 minute coal-burn before putting meat on.
-4 chunks of Apple Wood
-Foiled at ~170 degrees
-12 hour cook time
One thing I did differently this time than I did on other cooks is cook at OVER 250 degrees, rather than the 225-250 most people recommend. I figured it was a nice compromise between LNS and HH, and I wanted to get the butt done in time for dinner that night.
SO, I bought a bone-in Pork Butt (around 8lbs) and slathered it in my version of an All-Purpose rub. A little late, at 10:10, I started the smoker (Minion method, full charcoal grate with a full chimney of lit) and let it run for about 20 minutes to burn off a bit of the white smoke (I know this might not make a difference, but I like the idea of laying my meat in a hot smoker, ready to go) and then popped in 4 chunks of Apple Wood.
Anyway, put the meat on and probes in and got to selling junk!

Unfortunately, we got rain almost the entire morning and well into the afternoon so I had to do a bit of jury rigging with my windbreak and some blue SM I had on hand to keep the rain off it and temperatures steady.

I kept an eye on the temperature with my Maverick and made an effort to keep it around 260-270. I noticed the lid temp was showing over 300, but I just chalked that up to the differences everyone notes between their WSMs temperature gauge and ET-732 Mavericks. The main thing I took away from this was that the less concerned you are about how long your meat takes to cook, the higher the chances that you're going to get a better result!
At about 8:30 the meat was stalling at around 175ish and the pit temp was dropping steadily. I knew I was starting to run out of fuel because I hadn't HEAPED the grate like I had intended, and due to the hotter burning smoker I think I went through my coals a little quicker than I expected. I wanted to make sure I didn't leave anything to chance so not only did I add another full chimney of lit coals, but I foiled my butt as well.
Shortly after at about 10:00 (I had pulled the pit temp probe out and was just watching the meat temp probe) and saw that my meat was reading ~192 degrees. I went to the smoker and probed it....BUTTER, BABY!
Pulled it off (Almost dropped it, it was so soft) and let it rest on the kitchen counter for about 45 minutes while I watched the Sunday Nighter, and then came back and pulled it apart.
EASILY the tastiest, most well-cooked and aesthetically pleasing pork but I've done to date. I was a little concerned about the "Twist" test with the bone because there was a lot of meat stuck to it (YOu can see the crack in the shoulder in the pictures below...the whole bone-side of the shoulder was still attached to the bone, but the rest pulled right away from the remainded) but it proved to be an unfounded fear as the meat was tender and juicy all the way through.




Cliffs notes:
-8lb, bone-in Butt
-Trimmed fat cap
-Mustard + All Purpose Dry Rub
-Cold, rainy day (Had to establish windbreak for smoker)
-Full grate of Kingsford Blue
-Minion Method, allowing a slight 20-30 minute coal-burn before putting meat on.
-4 chunks of Apple Wood
-Foiled at ~170 degrees
-12 hour cook time