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Cookin' a pig on a Tucker... Help needed

Capt ron

Knows what a fatty is.
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I have a Tucker cooker and I only have been cooking ribs, butts, chick'in and brisket for bbq comps. Might I say it's a great cooker.

I was asked to cook a pig for a party.

Question is: Should I cook it butterflied, how long to cook the beast @ what temp and should I do it over direct heat or indirect?

Thank you all in advance for the help,
Capt Ron
 
I would cook it butterflied. If you have to present it, you might want to think about flipping it or cooking it skin side up. If it doesn't have to be pretty, skin side down. 250-275 is probably a good temp. How much does it weigh? There are people with plenty of experience who will chime in, I'm sure.....
 
Cooking a pig on a Tucker

The pig is going to weigh 75-80 pounds and it is not going to be presented..
thanks
capt
 
Depending on how things run, I'd guess about Edit: 10 hours +. Just a wild guess. You want to get it to about 190 in the shoulders without toasting the leaner cuts like the loin. I'm no hog expert....but Chad is.
 
See if this helps Capt. Ron You can modify it to suit your taste.

Whole Hog Roast

1 hog cooker
60 pounds of charcoal
10 small sticks of BBQ wood (hickory, oak, or fruit wood, etc)
1 70-pound whole hog, dressed (ready to cook)

Dry Rub Seasoning
6 tablespoons garlic salt
6 tablespoons paprika
4 tablespoons white sugar
3 tablespoons onion salt
2 tablespoons brown sugar
2 tablespoons chili powder
6 tablespoons salt
2 tablespoons red pepper
2 tablespoons cumin
4 tablespoons black pepper
1 tablespoons coriander



Cooking Directions
To prepare, lay the whole hog on its back on a flat table. With a small pair of handheld pruning shears, cut each rib bone as close to the spine as possible. This allows the hog to be spread out and lay flat (butterfly). When a hog is “butterflied” like this, it reduces the cooking time, enables each piece of meat to be cooked evenly, and makes seasoning the meat easier and uniform. With a sharp knife, score the top of each ham and shoulder with a cut about 1 inch deep to allow better heat penetration.

Season the belly of the hog with 2 cups of the dry rub. Work the rub into all crevices and make sure that all exposed meat is seasoned thoroughly.

Flip the hog over so that the skin is facing up. Coat the skin with olive oil. This helps generate a beautiful mahogany skin color during the cooking process.

When employing an indirect cooker or a smoker, the firebox is separate from the main cooking chamber. The hog can be cooked either skin side up or down during the entire cooking process. Cooking with the skin down produces a moist and flavorful result. Cooking with the skin up yields highly seasoned flavor with an unmatched presentation.

Light 10 pounds of charcoal in the firebox and add 2 small sticks of wood. When the cooker reaches 250 - 260 degrees, place the hog on the cooking grate. Maintain the desired cooking temperature by adding 10 pounds of charcoal and 2 sticks of wood every 2 hours or as needed. A more consistent temperature can be held if the charcoal is pre-lit and graying when added to the firebox. After 10 hours of cooking, remove the hog from the cooker and serve.

If the preference is to use a direct cooker, the firebox is inside the main cooking chamber. The hog can be started on the cooking grate skin up or down but needs to be flipped halfway through the cooking process to produce optimum results. A decision should be made based on finished presentation (skin side up) or easy pick’en (skin-side down).

For the direct cooker, light 20 pounds of charcoal in the bottom of the cooker. When the charcoal is hot and grayish white, spread the coals into a barbell shaped pile approximately the same size as the hog. This allows the larger pieces of meat (shoulders and hams) to finish cooking at the same time as the smaller pieces of meat (ribs and loin). Add 2 pieces of soaked wood to the charcoal bed. Center the hog on the cooking grate over the barbell shaped charcoal bed. Maintain the 250 – 260 degree cooking temperature by adding 10 pounds of charcoal and 2 small, soaked sticks of wood every 2 hours or as needed. Flip hog after 4 hours on the cooker. After 8 hours of cooking, remove the hog from the cooker and serve.


Serving Suggestions
Debone and chop all servable meat. Your favorite sauce may be added at this time or placed on the side where guests can help themselves. The chopped meat may be placed back in the hollow, crispy pork skin and served buffet style or out of a chafing dish. In North Carolina, bits of the crispy skin is often chopped up and added to the meat to provide extra flavor. Place the whole hog in the middle of a serving table and have a true pig pick’en. Let your guests’ delight in pulling their own pork off the centerpiece.
 
Depending on how things run, I'd guess about 14 hours +. Just a wild guess. You want to get it to about 190 in the shoulders without toasting the leaner cuts like the loin. I'm no hog expert....but Chad is.

Thanks, but no, I'm not an expert!:mrgreen: Some of the posts up this thread have some great guidelines...things like cutting the ribs, etc. Also, if you salt the skin heavily it will help is crisp up.

Butterflied will be the way to go...take off the head and feet. Inject the hams, shoulders, loins, tenderloins, etc. Get plenty of injection along the bones...

Be generous with the rub -- lift the skin up and get rub in the "pockets". Plenty of rub on the inside -- ribs, etc.

I'd start him skin side up for a few hours then flip him. As the rib/inside area begins to color up I'd put a sheet of foil in there to keep the thin meat like ribs from drying out.

If you are going to pull the pig let it cook to 185 or better and then let it rest for a while. Before you remove the heat do a test pull on the hams and shoulders. If you want to slice the meat I'd only cook it to about 170 in the hams....
 
With hope of not hijacking the Capt's thread to much...

I'm just curious as a novice and someone who has never cooked a whole hog why if there is not going to be any presentment of the cooked whole hog why cook a whole hog. Is it easier or harder to just smoke the different parts.

At my brother's wedding years ago they had a whole cooked hog and half the fun was pulling the meat off the porker. And watching the kids freak out over the head.

Just curious...
 
To the Brotherhood...
Thanks Guys... The information that you gave is a huge help... I will let you all know how it turns out...
 
You can do the pig direct on the tucker but you have to pay more attention to the entire cook.

Lower the charcoal pan all the way down. You will also need to have a burn pan/box going to shovel coals into the cooker. just cook with very small piles of coals at each end of the hog shoulders/hams, just hot enough to maintain around 250. Minimize any direct heat to the loin section.

cook time will go around 12-14 hours for that weight at that temp.
 
We cook our pigs in half split right down the back. No head, no tail, little or no hocks/shanks but that's just for easy handling. I agree with 12-14 hours at that temp for that sized hog.

Double layer some foil and create a kind of foil basket for the pig to sit in while it cooks. Keeps the cooker cleaner for you. That sucker is going to get grease everywhere.

For prepping or carving, we use a plastic try from Walmart. Its the kind of long tray you'd put sweaters or what have you under your bed. Keeps all of that grease/hog juice from running everywhere.
 

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Hey Plowboy I like that, I just never did it that way. I love the pics that hog looks good.
 
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