Advertisement
Home Chefs' Recipes

Smoky pork shoulder with Lexington barbecue sauce

Rockwell & Sons of Melbourne show us how real Southern barbecue is done.
Smoky pork shoulder with Lexington barbecue sauce

Smoky pork shoulder with Lexington barbecue sauce

John Laurie
10 - 12
20M
12H
12H 20M

“Hush puppies and red slaw (also called barbecue slaw) are traditional sides for a Lexington-style barbecue,” says Casey Wall. “We’ve simplified the cooking procedure and added a spice rub to mimic the time over hickory and oak coals. Nothing beats meat cooked over coals, but this comes close.” Begin this recipe two days ahead to brine the pork.

Ingredients

Spice mix
Lexington-style barbecue sauce

Method

1.Stir salt and 6 litres cold water in a large non-reactive container to dissolve, place pork in brine, ensuring it’s submerged, cover and refrigerate for 36 hours.
2.For spice mix, combine ingredients in a bowl, mix well and set aside.
3.Preheat oven to 110C. Remove pork from brine and pat dry with paper towels, then score the top in a shallow cross-hatch pattern. Rub spice mixture thoroughly all over pork, massaging it into the meat, then place pork in a large roasting pan and roast until the internal temperature reaches 93C and meat is very tender (10-12 hours). Cover with foil and rest (30 minutes to 1 hour).
4.Meanwhile, for Lexington-style barbecue sauce, simmer all ingredients, 125ml water, 1 tsp sea salt and 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper in a saucepan over medium heat for flavours to develop (5 minutes), then transfer to a sterile container and refrigerate until required. Barbecue sauce will keep for 2 months. Makes about 1 litre.
5.To serve, coarsely tear the meat into pieces (discard cartilage and blood vessels). Roughly run a knife once or twice across the meat to cut up the longer bits of muscle fibre and season with barbecue sauce to taste and some of the pan juices. Serve hot with hush puppies and Lexington red slaw. Leftover pork can be refrigerated for 2 days and used in sandwiches or wrapped in foil (drizzle with a little Lexington barbecue sauce first) and rewarmed in a moderate oven.

Boston butt is the top half of a pork shoulder and a common cut in the US. Order in advance here, though – your butcher will need to get a whole shoulder and halve it at the blade bone.

Drink Suggestion: Patrick Sullivan “Raz Ultra” Shiraz, or Fletcher “The Minion” Nebbiolo 2012, Victoria. Drink suggestion by Manu Potoi.

Notes

Related stories


Advertisement
Advertisement