Slow Roast Pork Shoulder With Herb Rub

- Total Time
- 12 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 6tablespoons mixed finely chopped robust herbs (like thyme, rosemary, sage and parsley)
- 3garlic cloves, finely chopped
- ¾cup brown sugar
- ½cup, plus 1 tablespoon sea salt
- 1tablespoon crushed black peppercorns
- A 7-pound pork shoulder, skin on, boned
- 5bay leaves
- Rosemary applesauce
- Crusty bread rolls, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Mix together herbs, garlic, ¼ cup brown sugar, 1 tablespoon sea salt and crushed peppercorns.
- Step 2
Untie the pork if rolled. In a large bowl, thoroughly dissolve ½ cup salt and ½ cup brown sugar in 2 quarts of cold water. Add bay leaves and 2 tablespoons of herb mixture. Place pork in a container or strong sealable bag and add this brine to completely cover. Cover or seal well and chill for from 8 hours to overnight.
- Step 3
Remove the pork from the brine (discard the brine) and dry thoroughly. Cover with the remaining herb mixture, patting it in all over, then use kitchen twine to roll up pork and secure it tightly.
- Step 4
Heat the oven to 225 degrees. Prepare a triple layer of aluminum foil large enough to comfortably enclose the pork. Put the rolled pork on the foil, skin/fatty side up. Gather the foil, scrunching it over to form a loose but well-sealed parcel. Place in a roasting pan in the oven. Take the first check for the internal temperature after 8 hours. For very tender meat that can be sliced, it should be 160 degrees and will probably take 10 hours. Check more often if needed. For a “pulled pork” consistency, the internal temperature should be 200 degrees and it will take about 12 hours.
- Step 5
Rest the meat 20 minutes before unwrapping completely. Warm the applesauce and the rolls. Slice the pork not too thin (removing the twine as you go) and put in the sliced rolls with some of the cooking juices and lots of applesauce.
Private Notes
Comments
I combine this recipe with Melissa Clark's "Porchetta Pork Roast" recipe (also from NTY Cooking), adding the lemon zest and fennel into the rub. I also score the roast as she does, then finish under the broiler to produce the crackling. Do NOT skip the brine; the lack of brine (and high temp!) in Ms. Clark's recipe are major oversights.
Low and slow is the way to go. Erno went wrong by using direct heat on the grill. You need a slow oven for this to truly work.
I gave this 5 stars, but with one caveat, use this on a 3-3.5lb pork shoulder instead of a 7lb one. I didn't read ahead that the recipe was for a 7lb pork shoulder, so I didn't half the recipe (just the time that I cooked it for). It came out perfectly done, and seasoned. I feel like if I used this on a 7lb pork shoulder that it would come out way under seasoned. For 3.5lb I cooked it on 200 degrees for 6 hours, and it came out with that perfect "pulled pork" consistency.
made this loin roast, brined, rub then grill. overdone at 170, try 145....
It was delicious. And time-consuming! I didn't read the recipe ahead of time so didn't realize it would take about 32 hours! But ultimately it was delicious. We served it with spoonbread and applesauce, a wonderful complement.
I really dislike using aluminum foil, especially since this use would make it too dirty to recycle. Has anyone tried another method of roasting--covered roaster, etc.?
I used @Sean's suggestion to add the lemon zest and ground fennel. It was in the oven at 225 degrees for 8+ hours. I scored the top layer of fat and put it under the broiler on 'Lo' to crisp it up! Thanks, Sean!
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