My Page
My Cookbooks
  • Main Cookbook
    Premium Members can have more than one cookbook in this list. They can keep private cookbooks just for organizing their recipes, or share them publicly with friends or the world. Learn more
My Account
Bookmark and Share

Add this recipe to your:

Send this recipe:

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 (479g)

Recipe makes 8 servings

The following items or measurements are not included below:

1/2 cup seasoning salt

1 1/2 teaspoons celery salt

Calories 1072
Calories from Fat 654 (61%)
Amount Per Serving %DV
Total Fat 72.7g 111%
Saturated Fat 25.1g 125%
Monounsaturated Fat 32.2g
Polyunsaturated Fat 8.1g
Trans Fat 0.0g
Cholesterol 322mg 107%
Sodium 332mg 13%
Potassium 1661mg 47%
Total Carbohydrate 19.6g 6%
Dietary Fiber 3.4g 13%
Sugars 12.0g
Protein 82.1g 164%

detailed view...

how is this calculated?

Smoked Pulled Pork

Recipe #358428 | ½ day | 10 min prep | add private note
breezermom

By: breezermom
Mar 1, 2009

This recipe is from the Loveless Cafe in Nashville Tennessee. It takes all day, so only dedicated grillers will probably take this on. The resulting taste is a little bit of heaven! Beware...the smell of this cooking all day may bring neighbors to your door begging for samples! Use of the Vinegar Hot Sauce is optional. It is more of a Tennessee/North Carolina custom. It does keep the pork nice and juicy! Prep time does not include soaking your hickory chips overnight or getting your coals ready on the grill.

SERVES 8 (change servings and units)

Ingredients

Directions

  1. 1
    Soak your hickory chips overnight.
  2. 2
    Mix together all ingredients except the Boston Butt. Liberally coat the pork with the dry rub mixture, really rubbing it into the meat.
  3. 3
    Place your charcoal grates at the lowest setting and your food rack at the highest setting in your grill. Pour charcoal in the grill and light. Once the coals are ready, move all the coals to one side. Place a pan of water on the other side. (An old aluminum pan from a pan of rolls works well -- something disposable).
  4. 4
    Place the meat on the cold side of the grill, fat side up. Add hickory chips to the charcoal and close the lid.
  5. 5
    Add more chips every 20 to 30 minutes. Add charcoal as needed, being careful not to let the fire die.
  6. 6
    Continue to smoke the pork for 9 hours. If you prefer not to have a crispy outside, you can wrap the meat in heavy duty aluminum foil for the last three hours of cooking.
  7. 7
    Remove from the heat and "pull" the meat. This means to separate the meat from any fat, gristle or bone, pulling the meat into strips suitable for sandwiches.
  8. 8
    Toss the meat with a vinegar hot sauce.
  9. 9
    Serve with barbecue sauce on a hamburger bun.

Questions about this recipe?

Spot an error in this recipe?

Try these recipes on Food Network:

Neely's Wet BBQ Ribs

Asian Spicy Barbecue Chicken

The Deen Brothers' BBQ Chicken

North Carolina-Style BBQ Pulled-Pork Sandwiches

Backyard BBQ'd Spareribs

Browse similar recipes by category

Featured Reviews for This Recipe

reviewer icon

From: mightyro_cooking4u

On Aug 16, 2009

Addictive!!!!! This was very tasty and juicey. I used a small butt, but I made everything else as written. I will make this again. Made for Photo Tag.

0 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • Read all 1 reviews

    Sister Sites: Food Network | HGTV | HGTVPro | DIY | Fine Living | Great American Country | FrontDoor.com Real Estate | Ecologue

    Comparison Shop for Kitchen Appliances & Utensils at Shopzilla & BizRate

    © 2009 Scripps Networks, Inc. All rights reserved