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Ingredients Jump to Instructions ↓

  1. 1 Pork butt, Boston butt, or untrimmed end-cut pork shoulder roast,

  2. 7 to 9 pounds

  3. Olive oil

  4. Kosher salt

  5. Freshly ground pepper

  6. Hickory wood chips, soaked in water for 30 minutes

  7. Lexington-Style Vinegar Sauce (see recipe below)

  8. 8 plain white hamburger buns, optional

  9. North Carolina Coleslaw:

  10. 1 recipe Lexington-Style Vinegar Sauce, (see recipe below)

  11. 1 medium head green cabbage, chopped

  12. Lexington-Style Vinegar Sauce:

  13. 2 cups apple cider vinegar

  14. 1/2 cup ketchup

  15. 1/4 cup packed brown sugar

  16. 2 tablespoons sugar

  17. 1 tablespoon ground white pepper

  18. 1/2 - 1 tablespoon red chili flakes (the more, the hotter*)

  19. 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Instructions Jump to Ingredients ↑

  1. For the Pulled Pork:

  2. Build a charcoal or gas grill for indirect cooking.

  3. Do not trim any excess fat off the meat; this fat will naturally baste the meat and keep it moist during the long cooking time. Brush pork with a thin coating of olive oil. Season with salt and pepper. Set aside on a clean tray until ready to cook.

  4. Before placing the meat on the grill, add the soaked wood chips. Place the chips directly on gray-ashed briquettes or in the smoking box of your gas grill. If using a charcoal grill, you will need to add charcoal every hour to maintain the heat.

  5. Place the pork in the center of the cooking grate, fat-side up, over indirect low heat. Cover and cook slowly for 4 to 5 hours at 325 to 350属F, or until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the middle of the pork registers 190 to 200属F. The meat should be very tender and falling apart. If there is a bone in the meat, it should come out smooth and clean with no meat clinging to it. (This is the real test for doneness on the barbecue circuit.) Remember, there is no need to turn the meat during the entire cooking time.

  6. Let the meat rest for 20 minutes or until cool enough to handle. Using rubber kitchen gloves (because it is so messy), pull the meat from the skin, bones, and fat. Set aside any crispy bits (fat) that have been completely rendered and look almost burned. Working quickly, shred the chunks of meat with 2 forks by crossing the forks and

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