I am cooking a 100lb half hog with a grill made out of a giant propane tank. i have never cooked something that big and need it done in about 3 hours. we are doing it for a school event and are making pulled pork sandwiches. Thanks!
I agree. Parts of the hog will get done in that time but not many. The front shoulder (butt and picnic) and the back (ham) are pretty thick and will never get close to cooked in 3 hours unless you crank up the heat to the point where the good stuff will be inedible. I think the rule on pork is "low and slow"...low temp, long cooking time. USDA now says 140F internal temp is ok for pork (instead of the old 180F rule that my mom used to insist on that made me hate eating pork for awhile). Funny thing about cooking meat...if you can keep your heat source at the level of doneness you want, you could put it on today and come back next week and it will be just fine. As for pork butts, oven first then charcoal? From what I know you would want to reverse that if you want any smoke flavor to it. Cooked meat will not take much smoke.Why such a short time limit? What you want to do is not possible. If you want pulled pork, buy a case of pork butts and cook them in the oven the day before. Throw them on charcoal for an hour or two and no one will know the difference. If you want to cook half a hog, you will need at least 8-12 hours.
Agree...2-3 hour "smoke", cut it up and go from there. The loin and belly will probably be done. On pulled pork my friends resort to the "Nesco" but never seen it done in 3 hours.I suspect the hog would cook faster if you cut it up.
Used to fish in northern Sask with a friend of my dad. He always talked about cooking fish with some method he called "ponash" (or something like that). A few years ago I heard about a Swedish tradition of burying raw fish for a few days/weeks, then eating it...sounded like the Swedish equivalent of haggis (only to be consumed as a ritual with mass amounts of alcohol).Ha,ha. Last year my son was having a luau in his back yard. Fortunately, he started a WEEK before by digging a massive "fire pit" in the lawn. Lots of rocks, lots of wood, charcoal briquets, palm leaves - the whole nine yards. He started the cooking Friday morning for a Saturday afternoon affair. By Sat AM he was smoky, tired, half crocked(they had a keg) and everybody realized the 50 pound pig would not be ready by that afternoon.
He dug it up, cut it up, threw the pieces in his & the neighbors ovens and after it was done and slathered with sauce nobody knew the difference.
The grass still does not grow well where the fire pit was. I ask, quite often, when will we have Luau #2, he just growls.