Times are hard.
Money is tight.
The lamb is too damn high and the three of us aren’t
going to spend the week eating spiral cut ham leftovers.
The lamb is too damn high. This is why we're eating honey baked pork loin #Easter pic.twitter.com/dUlNGDSMYw
— A. Cedric Armstrong (@cedteaches) April 17, 2022
I might save the prime rib for Mother’s Day depending
on my wife’s wishes but I may reprise Christmas dinner with another box of snow
crabs in a surf-and-turf take because even your friendly pitmaster has to play
bougie every now and then and wow the socks off my way better half.
Truth be told, I was planning to do something
different this year; after so long and so many cooks, the creativity wanes
and ebbs before cresting into a meal that can be requested for this date in the
upcoming years as well as any random Sunday afternoon potluck pending on
family’s desires following softball season.
Back to the cook: This is what we are all here for.
INGREDIENTS
One half pork loin (mine was about 3 lbs.); for a
larger crowd, feel free to use a whole loin
Fire & Smoke Society’s Sweet Preacher barbecue rub
Dub Shack BBQ’s Get Honey barbecue sauce
Honey mustard as a binder
Apple juice (optional; it’s in my water pan today)
STEP ONE. Open
the package that the pork loin came in, pat it dry, and let it sit in the
refrigerator overnight on a raised rack. In a pinch, you could do this in as
little as two hours prior to the actual cook but in this context, time is your
friend. Don’t forget to trim the inedible silver skin from the loin.
STEP TWO. Take
the loin our of the refrigerator and apply both the honey mustard binder and
Sweet Preacher before setting it aside to rise to room temperature. After
laying in the icebox all night long, the clenched protein needs to be able to
relax and warm up to room temperature. Remember, happy meat is tasty meat.
STEP THREE.
Light your fire. This time around, I’m using my Weber kettle and as always, the
weapon is immaterial as long as the end result is great food. Establish the
two-zone fire and add the all-important water pan and fill it with apple juice.
This is going to be relatively quick but not hot dogs and hamburgers fast yet
allow the grill to come up to 250-300 degrees before cooking. One chimney of
charcoal should get the job done, and as an additional buffer, I added one
split of apple wood because smoke also adds flavor and we all know that the
best barbecue flavors come from the best wood near you – or the local hardware
store, Academy, or even Walmart.
STEP FOUR. As I learned from the FDA, pork can be eaten at 145 degrees; to those who still are leery of a medium piece of pig, feel free to take your loin to 160: Just don’t dry it out. Around 130 degrees, move the loin over to the hot side and sear it for a few minutes on each side. The plan here is not to make those Chili’s style of cross hatches as much as it is to lock in the hard work of fire management; it is also a perfect time to glaze the pork loin with Get Honey on both sides to crisp up the skin. As the center of the loin reaches 145, remove it from the grill and bring it inside to rest for about fifteen minutes so the juices can redistribute from all sides; no one deserves dry meat least of all the people who share the space we call home.
STEP FIVE. After the fifteen minutes’ rest, slice and serve to your party with tantalizing side items!
Honey smoked pork loin is a slightly different take of
the hams too many of you spend too much money on during certain holiday seasons and hopefully it also results
in no leftovers – but if it does, make sandwiches, hash, or whichever direction
your heart desires to take the white meat sometime this week.
Be blessed, be safe, be good to each other, and
tell anyone within earshot that every day is a GREAT day for Dub Shack BBQ!
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