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Posted

I've found pork shoulder to be luscious bits of meat interspersed with intractable connective tissue.  Last night I cut some of the shoulder for a sandwich.  Some bites were wonderful.  Some bites I couldn't bite.  Enjoying tender meat will take a modicum of knife work.  What other cuts might work better?  Pork belly?

 

@rotuts how do you clean your disposable drip pan liners?  It sounds like a messy job unless you put them through the dishwasher.

 

Cooking is cool.  And kitchen gear is even cooler.  -- Chad Ward

Whatever you crave, there's a dumpling for you. -- Hsiao-Ching Chou

Posted

@JoNorvelleWalker  I know you didn't ask me but here is what Food Network has to say:

When to Use Pork Butt

 

Because pork butt has intense fat marbling and a concentration of connective tissue, it can endure hours of cooking. Pork butt is an ideal choice for barbecue pulled pork, but it also lends itself to braising and stewing, which tenderizes the meat and melts the fat. Use pork butt in any recipe where you’re looking for fall-apart-tender meat and a rich, porky flavor, such as pulled pork, carnitas or stew. Pork butt can also be roasted or made into ground pork or sausages.

 

When to Use Pork Shoulder

 

When you want the meat to hold its shape when sliced or chopped, opt for pork shoulder. Pork shoulder can be roasted whole and sliced, like ham, or braised and sliced or chopped before serving. It can also be cut into chunks for stew or chili recipes. Since pork shoulder is sold with the skin on, pork shoulder is also your best bet if you’re looking to obtain a crisp skin (although you can trim the skin if desired). Pork shoulder can also be used to make ground pork.

 

I much prefer the butt.  

Posted (edited)

@JoNorvelleWalker

 

its not so bad.

 

1 ) I line them ( Im still on drip pan # 1 ) w parchment paper , the brown version .  I take my time doing this, 

 

as  the paper needs to extend above the lip.

 

2 ) I pour out the liquid in the pan , melted fat and jus which still reasonably hot .  I save this.  I dispost of the parchent paper.

 

3 ) I let the aluminum pan cool over night , and remove any congealed fat w a spatula , as i try to keep fat out of my drains.

 

4 ) then using the hottest water i have , use a nylon brush to wash out any residual , then the cooper ' scrub-by to clean a bit more

 

result :

 

IMG_7104.thumb.jpeg.b7bcf488ecf595d619264460432c47a4.jpeg

 

its clean .  just has some ' restaurant char '   the king you see on well used restaurant pans.

 

N.B. :  nothing semi disposable about it.  good for 10 - 20 more experiments.  w the parchment of course.

 

P.S.:  Im also using the GE-IDS at initial temps of 200 F these days.  a lot less char.  the char you see

 

probably came from initial experiments starting @ 225 F.

Edited by rotuts (log)
  • Thanks 1
Posted (edited)

in my area , pork shoulder is the same as the  butt.  

 

pork shoulder , as mentioned above is called picnic shoulder 

 

this is a ref w good pictures :

 

https://www.americastestkitchen.com/articles/1214-the-difference-between-pork-butt-and-pork-shoulder

 

butt is much tastier .   to solve the tenderness issue Ive SV'd  butt first , then GE'd

 

the meat Ive shown is also called ' country style ribs '  sold w bones or not

 

the versions I look for @ MarketBasket  are boneless , and I think higher up from the ribs

 

into the shoulder that sold whole is Butt.

 

as an example of ' Pre-GE-IDS "  :

 

https://forums.egullet.org/topic/154537-what-are-you-cooking-sous-vide-today-part-3/page/87/#comment-2452528

 

 

the  Pork :

 

IMG_6920.thumb.jpeg.894c417b86d1293d5a023806d97e4221.jpg.dacbbbaa8aba250fba9cb7301c64a53a.jpg

 

this is how MarketBasket markets the pork I look for  " Pork Butt Bonelss Souther Style Ribs "

 

I have no idea why this is ' souther style "  and im fairly sure this is ' boneless ' as its cut from the Butt

 

well above any ribs  looks like this on The Plate ;

 

IMG_6924.thumb.jpeg.8fee091b6a5fa772a63cb540855ce2f2.jpg.c0b5dc2684427f3787a2682b1739198a.jpg

 

 

its ' dark meat ' pork .  I look for the dark cuts , not the lighter cuts , which come father down the pig

 

and those lighter pieces of meat are Loin .  avoid loin .  tough .  flavor less.

 

ready for the desalted bacon I use , to keep the surface of the meat moist :

 

IMG_6936.thumb.jpeg.93b10d097af3cf08f2a1afee2ad2c2d7.jpg.aa5a1f16e10f3c36de4c0a2fcf7683d9.jpg

 

these pork terms will vary by area and store to store in the same area .

 

in my area , MarketBasket  is the only one to sell Butt , butchered like this . 

 

and its not in the pork section of the meat counter all the  time.  some times the ' label '

 

has 50 % white meat loin.  I wait for 100 % dark , on the next visit.

 

 

Edited by rotuts (log)
  • Like 3
Posted
6 hours ago, ElsieD said:

@JoNorvelleWalker  I know you didn't ask me but here is what Food Network has to say:

When to Use Pork Butt

 

Because pork butt has intense fat marbling and a concentration of connective tissue, it can endure hours of cooking. Pork butt is an ideal choice for barbecue pulled pork, but it also lends itself to braising and stewing, which tenderizes the meat and melts the fat. Use pork butt in any recipe where you’re looking for fall-apart-tender meat and a rich, porky flavor, such as pulled pork, carnitas or stew. Pork butt can also be roasted or made into ground pork or sausages.

 

When to Use Pork Shoulder

 

When you want the meat to hold its shape when sliced or chopped, opt for pork shoulder. Pork shoulder can be roasted whole and sliced, like ham, or braised and sliced or chopped before serving. It can also be cut into chunks for stew or chili recipes. Since pork shoulder is sold with the skin on, pork shoulder is also your best bet if you’re looking to obtain a crisp skin (although you can trim the skin if desired). Pork shoulder can also be used to make ground pork.

 

I much prefer the butt.  

 

Like @rotuts I use the terms interchangeably.

 

  • Like 1

Cooking is cool.  And kitchen gear is even cooler.  -- Chad Ward

Whatever you crave, there's a dumpling for you. -- Hsiao-Ching Chou

Posted
12 hours ago, rotuts said:

@JoNorvelleWalker

 

looks very tasty.  nice crust .

 

what were your times and temp settings ?

 

 

Wood Kona Sweetwood Blend

Temperature 102C

Probe Target 65C

Keep Warm 60C

Smoke Level 5

 

Smoking time was about 3 hours.  I pulled the meat when the probe reached 63C.  I finished the shoulder in the Anova for an hour at 62C and 80% relative humidity.

 

  • Like 1

Cooking is cool.  And kitchen gear is even cooler.  -- Chad Ward

Whatever you crave, there's a dumpling for you. -- Hsiao-Ching Chou

Posted

Umm I did competition barbecue a looooonng time ago.

 

But back then the pork shoulder was compromised of a pork butt and a pork picnic, with the butt being the shoulder joint area and the picnic the forearm.

 

But it’s been a long time.

  • Like 2
Posted
19 hours ago, JoNorvelleWalker said:

I've found pork shoulder to be luscious bits of meat interspersed with intractable connective tissue.  Last night I cut some of the shoulder for a sandwich.  Some bites were wonderful.  Some bites I couldn't bite.  Enjoying tender meat will take a modicum of knife work.  What other cuts might work better?  Pork belly?

 

@rotuts how do you clean your disposable drip pan liners?  It sounds like a messy job unless you put them through the dishwasher.

 

With all due respect to beef briskets, duck breasts, chicken thighs, ribs of various sorts, pork bellies and the filets of every fish in the ocean, pork shoulder is the single most perfect cut of meat on the planet.

 

If you were served a shoulder that you could not get your teeth through, it’s not the fault of the pig or the butcher.

  • Like 2
Posted

@Dr. Teeth

 

Correct , esp SV shoulder , then Maillard .

 

( Dover-ish ) Sole and very fresh wild salmon , from close to the salmon's head

 

are possible exceptions to this rule.

  • Like 1
Posted
6 minutes ago, rotuts said:

@Dr. Teeth

 

Correct , esp SV shoulder , then Maillard .

 

( Dover-ish ) Sole and very fresh wild salmon , from close to the salmon's head

 

are possible exceptions to this rule.

I will grant you, there are applications from a number of cuts that is superior to any one use of a pork shoulder.

 

It is the collective contribution of the shoulder to carnitas, to sausage manufacture, to sunday sauce and pulled pork that puts it in a class by itself 

  • Thanks 1
Posted
3 hours ago, Dr. Teeth said:

With all due respect to beef briskets, duck breasts, chicken thighs, ribs of various sorts, pork bellies and the filets of every fish in the ocean, pork shoulder is the single most perfect cut of meat on the planet.

 

If you were served a shoulder that you could not get your teeth through, it’s not the fault of the pig or the butcher.

 

...If teeth I had.

 

  • Sad 2

Cooking is cool.  And kitchen gear is even cooler.  -- Chad Ward

Whatever you crave, there's a dumpling for you. -- Hsiao-Ching Chou

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