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| Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables. |
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Bruce K. wrote:
Is there any advantages (or dissatvantages) in having the bone removed from a pork butt? I'm thinking about saving time on the Que. Thanks, Bruce K. IMHO, if you put a 6-lb bone-in butt on the same smoker next to a 6-lb boneless one, the bone-in one would be done first. Believe the same thing holds in the oven with roasts. I like having the bone, think it distributes the heat into the meat and possibly adds a bit of flavor. |
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Bruce K. wrote:
Is there any advantages (or dissatvantages) in having the bone removed from a pork butt? I'm thinking about saving time on the Que. Some people do the "wiggle test" on the bone to see if the meat is done - when the bone pulls free, the meat is ready to pull. There is a chance of introducing bacteria to the center of the meat when you cut out the bone. -- Aloha, Nathan Lau San Jose, CA #include std.disclaimer |
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"Bruce K." wrote in message ... Is there any advantages (or dissatvantages) in having the bone removed from a pork butt? I'm thinking about saving time on the Que. Thanks, Bruce K. I have very recent experience with this by way of cooking for a graduation party for my daughter and I'll say don't do boneless. I cooked 8 butts that totaled about 50 lbs. I didn't notice when I bought them from Costco that they were boneless but it turned out they were a decent price. ($1.29/lb. IIRC) I rubbed the 1st 4 and just put them on the K as I normally do. It did allow a lot more surface for rub, ergo, more bark. But they took longer to cook and, AFAIC, just didn't have the flavor as it does with the bone in. They also dried out somewhat. On the next 4 I rubbed them and them rolled them up wrapped in cheesecloth. Solved the moisture problem somewhat but the bark development just wasn't there. The cheesecloth method I do is excellent for poultry but just doesn't do much for brisket or butt. Finally it also turned out that when they were boned out it appears that a lot of fat was removed which clearly was part of the moisture problem. All that said I would go for bone in. _________ ht_redneck |
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My experience has been that bone in cooks a bit quicker, and the butcher has
left all the fat in place e.g.. a moister product. We save the bone and some of the bark and freeze it, next time I make beans I use that for an addition to my beans it's really a great with small white/navy beans. Bruce-n-Gold Beach |
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