My first whole hog

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A few weeks ago I cooked my first whole hog. I've been cooking on the WSM for a few years and my wife and I have thrown our fair share of barbecues and parties, but this was crazy. I almost had a stress induced heart attack a couple of times but it turned out great.

Before I did it I tried reading as much as I could online and in this forum, but you can never have too much information about this kind of thing. So in that spirit, I offer you the full account of my whole hog experience. This is by no means a how-to guide, or even the right way to do it, it's just how I cooked my whole hog and how it turned out for me.

To save space and be able to post pictures I put the whole thing up on my livejournal. You can leave comments here or there. I hope you enjoy it and it inspires someone else to throw a pig roast. It may be ambitious, but with a little know-how anyone can do it and I highly recommend it.

Read the whole thing here!

Brad
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by A.Miller:
Why is there a chain link fence around the pig? </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

It's chicken wire. I read that it's a good idea to make a basket/container for the pig so you can rotate it and flip it over without having to grab the legs. That way nothing breaks off in your hand while you are moving it.
 
That's a good documentary. Especially good with all the pictures!

Did the chicken wire do a good job of flipping the pig? I really wanna do one and if that works, that is a really cheap solution.
 
Thanks, glad you liked it.

The chicken wire worked really well for me, but presentation was not an issue with me at all and I only flipped it one time. The thin wire did cut into the skin a bit when I turned it over and one hoof might or might not have snaped at a right angle (don't ask, I don't know why). So, if you want it to look perfect you might use a thicker wire, like some kind of chain link fence perhaps.

However, if I was doing it again on the same cooker I might not use a basket at all. This cooker had handles on the grill surface so two people could pick up the whole grate to rotate the pig 180 degrees. And I would probably leave the hog on its back the whole time and never flip it. I don't know if that is frowned upon or if you risk burning the skin, but it seemed to be a better position for applying the mop and keeping some kind of barrier between the meat and coals. There is a post somewhere on this forum where Jim Minion talks about cooking the hog (unbutterflied) on its back and using the body cavity as a big bowl to hold the mop. I thought that sounded a little complicated for my first time out, but I might try something like that next time.

Update: That hog cavity/mop bucket post is here. It's a good whole hog discussion in general.
 
I have actually cooked two whole hogs in my backyard in Austin using a traditional Imu pit just like an authentic luau. It was a ton of trouble, but worth the bragging rights...and you only turn 30 once, right?

Anyway, I loved the pork from the luaus, but I want to try cooking a whole pig in a homemade pit in the backyard. Anybody have experience with this? I came across these directions. Your comments are welcome...


"1.Have the slaughter-house clean the hawg but have them leave on the head,
all feet, and tail (a cap goes on the tail.) Also tell them not to damage
the ears (some slaughter-houses think they have to suspend the hawg by
grabbing them with some sort of hanging device around the base of the ears,
but we have found that they can do this without harming the ears.) Also, if
you can remember, have them prop the mouth open with a stick because an
apple must go in the mouth, and most humans are not strong enough to open
the mouth for this purpose.


2.Hawgs in the weight range of 8O-12O pounds dressed (where dressed means a
hawg that has been cleaned but has the head, feet, and tail attached.)
usually cook best. We've cooked hawgs as large as 396 pounds dressed, but we
don't recommend it. The amount of meat per person will depend on the group.
An all-men group will consume a good bit more than a mixed group,
particularly if the people in the mixed group have never attended one of
these. If they have attended one previously and found that the hawg didn't
kill 'em, then they will eat more. We suggest one pound of dressed hawg per
person.


3.We do not dig a pit in Mississippi due to the clay. Build a pit of
concrete blocks two blocks high, five blocks long, and three blocks wide
(for one hawg) on flat ground or slightly sloping ground which will help
drain the grease away. This takes a total of 32 blocks. If you are short a
few blocks, you can get by with 28 blocks by making the pit four blocks
long.


4.Line the bottom of the pit with freezer foil, not regular aluminum foil as
it is too thin.


5.Spread out a few bricks (five or six) in the bottom of the pit.


6.Place a fine steel grate (or fine wire mesh) on the bricks in the bottom
of the pit. This will prevent large grease fires if you pay attention and
immediately put out the small fires which start when grease drops down on
the hot coals. (Doss likes to use a water (squirt) bottle for this. I think
that's cheatin' and should be done by using the small coal shovel to spread
the coals away from the small fires.)


7.Place the rods across the top of the blocks with another piece of fine
steel grate on top of the rods. The hawg will go on top of this grate.
(Actually we now use a steel grate that has long lengths of small sized
angle-iron down each side that reaches across the pit and the hawg goes
directly on this grate.)


8.When the hawg arrives, start four or five pounds of charcoal in the
charcoal cooker. (This cooker is used only to get the coals ready to place
under the hawg.)


9.To prepare the hawg do the following:


Rip-out the kidneys and any extra tubes, etc. (like the aorta) that the hawg
will no longer need. Take the single bladed ax and hammer and start
splitting the backbone so the hawg will lay flat on the grate. (This method
of cookin' is called butterfly cookin', so you want to open him up so he
will lay-out (like a flyin' squirrel).)DO NOT CUT THROUGH THE SKIN or you
will have BIG-TIME problems later on. In fact, don't cut the skin in any
way, or poke any holes in the skin. After you get the hawg laid-out, the
apple is next. Have your stoutest guy or gal pull the mouth open and stick
an apple in it. I have seen this done once. If you have no Paul Bunyan
around, use item 11 in the equipment list. The apple is necessary because he
will bite the apple when he is done.


10.After the hawg is prepared, lay him belly down on the grate. Place a nice
hat on his head between his ears, shades on his eyes, and an Ole Miss
baseball cap on his rear end. The hawg won't cook without these items.


11.Now take pictures with the bosses up front and the real workers in the
rear, or better yet with the real workers not even in the picture. The
reason for the pictures is that all night long you will swear you are
getting nowhere in cookin' this hawg, but 24 hours later you can prove you
started with a raw hawg. The reason for the bosses being up front is because
they will be there anyway. besides, this may encourage them to pay for
everything, and they are of no use for anything else anyway.


12.You are ready to start cookin` now. Use the small coal shovel to place 2
to 3 coals under each ham and each shoulder. (NO MORE COALS THAN THIS!)


13.You will now start getting verbal abuse about how the hawg won't cook, it
will be raw, any fool would know better, etc, etc. Tell them fine, they
don't have to eat any of it tomorrow. Then replenish the charcoals you took
out of the charcoal cooker and head for the beer cooler. (You only have to
start the charcoal once. After the first time, simply spread the hot
charcoal out so that when the charcoal gets hot, it is about time to put
more coals under the hawg. I would guess this works out to be about every 3O
to 4O minutes. More on this in instruction number 16 below.)


14.Say you want to eat the hawg(s) at 5 P.M. on a Saturday. (All that
follows relative to time will be based on this assumed eating time. For any
other eating time apply a suitable forward or backward shift operator.) We
usually pick the hawg up and get him to the site by at least 4 P.M. on
Friday. You should be able to get him stated cookin' by 4:3O or 5:OO P.M. on
Friday. The hawg is to be turned over only once. He will probably need to be
turned over on his back between 8 A.M. and 1O A.M. on Saturday at that
"moment-of-perfection," and I don't know how to describe to you what that
"moment-of-perfection" is, so just turn him at 9:41 A.M. on Saturday.


15.After starting the hawg at 5 P.M. on Friday, continue cookin' him by
adding coals now and then. You can leave him uncovered on the pit for
viewing until around 10 P.M. Friday night. Then you need to cover him. Cover
him first with one piece of sheet iron that DOES NOT TOUCH THE HAWG ANYWHERE
EXCEPT THE FEET AND EARS. We use a special piece of bent sheet iron that
does not touch the hawg. Over this sheet iron place a small tarp that covers
the pit. This is essentially our cooking oven.


16.The rate at which coals are applied comes, I suppose, from experience.
For the entire 24 hours of cooking, you should use slightly less than one
pound of charcoal per pound of hawg. For example, for a 1OO pound dressed
hawg (including head and feet), we would buy 1OO pounds of charcoal, but we
would probably only use around 8O to 9O pounds of charcoal. The key to
cookin' is to START SLOW and don't eveer get much faster. Just be
PERSISTENT. It is a low-temperature/long-duration cooking process. Every
time one of our cookers have described to someone else how to cook a hawg,
they usually cook too fast and ruin the hawg.


17.After the hawg is turned over, grease will drip, or even run at times, so
one should not put the coals where the grease drips. (Actually it will begin
dripping long before it's turned but the greatest danger of significant
grease fires occurs after turning.) We usually place the coals more around
the edges after turning. This will not hurt the cooking rate because the
sheet iron and tarp will be like an oven. This locating of hot coals is, of
course, to prevent grease fires. We have never had a large grease fire since
we started using the raised steel grate on the bottom of the pit. Before the
use of the steel grate we had some big-time grease fires that even Ward
would love.


18.Also after the hawg is turned you should baste (or pour) barbecue sauce
on the bottom side of the hawg which is now turned up. This doesn't get any
barbecue flavor into the meat, it only keeps the meat from getting dry on
this side, so any kind of sauce will do. We usually serve the barbecue sauce
on the side, so that people can have hot, or mild, or whatever they want, or
whatever you have to offer. Repeat this basting every couple of hours.


19.When the hawg is done (by definition he is done at 5 P.M., and at this
time he will bite the apple in two) pick him up by using the rods or sucker
rod grate and move him to a place in the food line on the saw horses. Use
two cutters, or pullers, on either side of the hawg. The best thing to do if
the hawg is cooked properly is for these pullers to put on the rubber gloves
(the thicker the glove the better because the meat will be hot) and simply
pull the meat off and pull it apart. Do not use swine experts or
veterinarians for this, as they don't seem to know the difference between a
ham and a tenderloin. Be careful to not break the skin, the grease (which
you will not notice dripping through) can ruin a good pair of Justin boots
in no time."

Anybody cook a whole hog without a cooker? Sorry if this has been answered before.
 
Just finished reading your account. Would love to try that sometime if I can find a grill that size on the island. If I was willing to open a smoking rest. here I could make a fortune. They have nothing like this anywhere on the island and the thought of whole smoked pig would drive the local Maltese crazy.
 
Brad, good job on your first pig.
A very interesting read !

For what its worth I`ll share some of my results. I`ve been cooking several of these a year for 18 years, ranging anywhere from 40 to 194lbs in size. A friend of mine (Dave, also a TVWB member) and myself stuffed and cooked 2 of the largest pigs I`ve ever seen 182lbs and 194lbs before stuffing (included 6 lbs butter in each : ), cooked stacked in the same cooker. These types of cooks can be smoked or charcoal or underground, on ground or even gas cooked with some fantastic results. The methods of cooking are endless. What you always are in control of is how easy or how time consuming you want to make it...quite often with very similar results. We have rotated, butterflied, cut in half, left belly up, left belly down, charcoal under, charcoal off to the side etc. etc. etc.
The 182lb and 194lb were stuffed and cooked in a gas cooker with corncobs for smoke from 8:30 am to 6 pm. The customers loved them!
Here is a pic of a 50 - 60 lb, cannot remember exact size, smoked over hickory, cherry and apple last year from 8:30-6:00 pm (never rotated) Just before carving.
110_1061.jpg


I don’t use chicken wire, not that there is anything wrong with it, just never needed to.
When cooking a whole pig I don’t remove the rib membrane, to me it holds the natural juices in.
Next time try an easier method where you can get some sleep and start cooking in the morning, and compare your results.

One thing I have found is that a whole pig as delicious as they are, will never taste as good a single butt. When we cater, its "pig for show and butt for dough", usually an uncarved 40lb`er in the middle surrounded by mounds of pulled pork.

All in all it sounds like you had a successful and fun cook and in the end that’s what its all about!


Harvey


Good Luck
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Anybody cook a whole hog without a cooker? </div></BLOCKQUOTE>
Many times and many times in a way not too unlike your description. Whole hog I prefer marinated/brined--never plain--and I agree with Harvey when he says, "What you always are in control of is how easy or how time consuming you want to make it...quite often with very similar results." I have done many, many ways and while I like to rotate (I like very crisp skin and never pierce it) I don't find an advantage to stretching a cook out to 24 hours.

In the northeast we did them over open ground-dug pits; in the west in the ground; I learned the concrete block thing from a couple of the Cuban guys from here. You cannot dig a pit on Miami--either you hit sand and water or impossible-to-budge coral. Block is an excellent work-around (and you can build one in a city alley, cook your pig in the afternoon-evening and disassemble with no one the wiser
icon_cool.gif
). I was going to re-build one between my and my neighbor's ranches last fall then we decided to wait till after the hurricane season (good thing) and, recently, he decided to buy a Caja China which I can use when I wish and might. I do like doing them but really prefer the parts (butts, ribs, belly, hams) cooked separately and differently from each other. I like the block method though when a whole pig is essential or desired just for fun. I highly recommend aluminum chain link if you can find it (alternatives to link work fine though--but nothing galvanized), and I recommend sheet aluminum on the ground (or at least HD foil).

Great write-up Brad!
 
My way of doing a whole hog is very near the same as Jay's. We use the blocks and I have built a top and bottom grate made of angle iron and heavy gauge wire mesh that are strapped together with the hog in the middle. The 24 hours is just about perfect and that gives plenty of time for beer drinking in between firing. Flip once I agree with and we use a mop sauce instead of BBQ sauce but it the same principal.

The grease fires are tricky and we have had our share of them and its no fun. We use cardboard to lay on top of the hog which hurts us a bit but it works ok.

If anyone has never done this before by all means sign up with someone are do it on your own, it's the most fun you will ever have. It is alot of work but well worth it especially if you can get a big crowd coming through watching the process.

We use hickory slabs from the sawmill and a burn barrel for heat and just shovel in coals in as needed.

Once it's done it where most of the work comes in, pulling all the meat, but it's a experience you will never forget. I still have grease between my toes I think and ruined a pair of tennis shoes not even realizing the grease drippings off the table and forgot to change my shoes.

The last one we done last fall weighed 496 lbs on foot and after we got it killed and dressed weighed 406 lbs. Let me just say that is entirely to big. We had lots of trouble with it and almost broke the grates apart and took 4 grown men to even move this beast and we all agreed we will never do one this big again. 150 -250 lbs is just about right, we have done hogs ranging form 60 lbs up to the 406 lber.

Randy
 
I have cooked many whole hogs living here in eastern NC and let me say WOW - $2.89/pound? I can get a whole hog dressed, without its head, for $1.19/pound if it is over 80 pounds - but I guess that is part of living here - the #2 pork producing state in the country.

The cooker I use for my cooks is an old flat top oil drum and is very common around here. However I use mine a little different than most. Mine is a 100% charcoal cooker (a lot of folks use gas) - I wrap the perimeter of my charcoal grate with a long line of charcoal - I then put about 3/4 chimney of lit on each end of the cooker at the start of my cook - I let the rest light ala Minion Method and can usually get about 5 hours at a good steady 250. Then I play with the cooker for about another 5 hours when the cook is done - this is a 100% indirect cook - and I don't let whole hogs go for the more traditional 16-18 hours I cook butts on my WSM. Right at the end of my cook, I spread a new chimney of hot coals under the pig that will help crisp the skin - that stuff is yummy!

A couple more things:

I don't flip or rotate my pigs - I used to flip them - starting lean side down and finishing skin side down. But after thinking about it, and now trying it, I'm convinced skin side down the whole time is better. The pig is basically self basting through the whole cook this way - makes for a very juicy, tender pig. At the end of a cook, when I pull all the meat, I essentially pull it and place it back in the cavity of the pig - this way people get to "pick the pig" - gives a nice feel to it for them - even if it is really a big serving dish - and as you pull the meat, all those juices soak back into the meat.

I definitely am a fan of injection now also - I don't think the rub offers much to the overall taste of the final product unless you eat some of the ribs - which just don't hold meat when you cook this way - it will hold little hunks of meat, but not like you get on a babyback rib. And all that side meat under the ribs...bacon. Yummy! That is very stringy which turns some people off, but it is some of the most tender, tasty meat on the pig IMO.

I guess that is about all I can think of now - but it looks like you had a very successful first cook and hope to hear about more in the future - I'm cooking a small (50 pound) pig for some friends this weekend - maybe I'll take some pics and post them next week!
 

 

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