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Any Time is Grillin Time

^^^ I'm vacationing in the Carolinas, but those last two posts make me want to jump in the car and drive to Olbriarville...
 
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I find pork shoulder plenty moist after trimming most of the fat off prior to smoking. The rendered fat just mucks up my smoker and does nothing to enhance the end product IMO. I put the big trim on the butt and liberally seasoned it with my favorite pork rub and had this hunk of wonderful in the smoker by 8:30 AM. I am smoking at 225° , wrapping to crunch at 160° or so, and will remove it to relax prior to pulling when it reaches 205°.
aaapork.jpg
 
If you need to repurpose any leftovers my wife made this the last time a smoke a shoulder and it was unbelievable. In fact we are thawing out some frozen pulled pork to have it again this week.

 
The casserole looks great. It would be a hard sell to my wife. I'd be all over it though :) The last butt I smoked, I saved two meals to consume and froze the rest. I vac sealed portions that were perfect for making deluxe burritos for me or a couple of sandwiches. I'm not about to waste any of it. I plan to do the same tonight. Sadly, my wife is not a fan of pulled pork and refuses to eat cornbread. It is true... opposites attract. :)

Wings are always good!
 
My pork butt was almost up to temp when I came home from riding. I turned the smoker down and opened the lid and let the butt loose a couple of degrees before turning the smoker back up. It's just about up to temp again. This is a buddy trick. He likes to keep it just short of target for an hour or so, sitting in a pan, and steaming. I wasn't ready to let it rest so I thought I'd give his cook a try. I can't see that it could hurt a thing, steaming it it's juices for forty five minutes. .... I hope :)
 
I decided it's time for a steak night: so I pulled a couple of special ribeyes out of the freezer. These are from grass-fed beef that never received hormones or antibiotics... most importantly, look at the incredible marbling on these beauties! They were sold at a chain grocery store, marked as USDA Choice: but if someone put these in front of me and asked me what grade they are, I'd bet money that they're USDA Prime. I'll put a marinade on them that took me 20 years to perfect; get a nice, steakhouse diamond sear on them and serve them this evening with sauteed mushrooms and a glass of Schiava.


PrimeChoiceSteak.jpg
 
I decided it's time for a steak night: so I pulled a couple of special ribeyes out of the freezer. These are from grass-fed beef that never received hormones or antibiotics... most importantly, look at the incredible marbling on these beauties! They were sold at a chain grocery store, marked as USDA Choice: but if someone put these in front of me and asked me what grade they are, I'd bet money that they're USDA Prime. I'll put a marinade on them that took me 20 years to perfect; get a nice, steakhouse diamond sear on them and serve them this evening with sauteed mushrooms and a glass of Schiava.


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Those don't only look like prime cuts, they rival Wagyu! You and your lady are in for a real treat!!!
 
Those don't only look like prime cuts, they rival Wagyu! You and your lady are in for a real treat!!!
Wow, I'd just finished telling former tax deduction son that these are getting into Wagyu range when you posted that! Yep, these should be tender enough to chew themselves!

EDIT: On the plate with the mushrooms and corn, that steak was a masterpiece. I literally cut mine with a fork. Some animals are born to end up on a plate and, praise the Lord, that one ended up one mine. The Darling Bride was equally satiated with hers, so all I can say is that's one more awesome steak dinner in the books.
 
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