Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Starting the pork in a low oven breaks down tough connective tissue.
  • Finishing the pork in high heat rapidly crisps up the skin.

Remember in the first season of Thundercats when Lion-o had to prove himself as the true Lord of New Thundera by battling each of the other cats in their own game? After he proves himself stronger than Panthro, beats Cheetara in a race, outwiles the ThunderKittens WilyKit and WilyKat in the Maze of Infinity, and overcomes Tygra's mental projections to face his greatest fear, you think that the whole thing is over and you can finally rest easy.

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (1)

But no, Lion-o's anointment comes back with a vengeance as he is forced to face none other than Mumm-ra himself on the fifth day.

Well, we've tackled whole roastedsuckling pig, not just one, buttwo versions of all-belly porchetta(onecooked sous-vide and deep fried),andacrown roastof pork.Surely our adventures in Swineville are over, you thought.

Nope. Here, we're going to talk about what is perhaps the greatest of all bits of culinary alchemy. The transformation of one of the cheapest cuts of meat in the butcher's display case into one of the most glorious festive centerpieces imaginable.

We're talkingpork butt, in all of it's juicy, porky, spoon-tender in the middle, impossibly crisp and crusty-on-the-outside glory.

What Is Pork Butt?

First off, a quick word on nomenclature. Pork butt is not pork butt.Let me explain.

See, at some point in our colonial past, Boston was well known for its pork production and would often ship preserved pork (most often front shoulders—the least desirable part of the hog—but often hams and heads as well) in large wooden barrels. These barrels were of the size officially known as "butt" or "pipe." That'd be a 126 gallon barrel half the size of a 252 gallon tun, larger than a 84 gallon firkin, and twice the size of a 63 gallon hogshead (which, incidentally, have nothing to do with actual hogs or heads).

The pork-filled barrels shipped out across the country came to be known as Boston Butts, a term which was soon applied to the meat inside, despite the fact that it actually came from the shoulder of the hog. These days, conventions in many parts of the country still refer to the pork shoulder as Boston butt, though in many cities (including Boston itself), they're known as just plain "butt."

Had our forebears deigned to ship pork in 84 gallon barrels, we might have found ourselves spooning slow-cooked pulled Boston firkin into our BBQ sandwiches, perhaps making our Italian sausages out of Boston puncheon, or if those shoulders were shipped to New Mexico via 18 gallon barrels, they'd be chowing down on chile verde made out of Boston rundlet.

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (2)

With that out of the way, let's talk aboutwhat is actually inside a Boston butt... er, shoulder.

A full bone-in Boston butt is a formidable piece of meat, usually weighing in at around eight to twelve pounds, riddled with a significant amount of connective tissue and inter/intramuscular fat, all swathed in a thick, tough skin.

Our goal is tomake this tough piece of meat spoonably tender.How do you do that? Well, you cook it.

  • Fast twitch muscleis the stuff that the animal rarely uses except in short bursts. The breasts on a chicken that let it flap its wings rapidly when escaping danger. The loins on a cow that, well, barely get used at all. Fast twitch muscle is characterized by tenderness (think chicken breast, pork chops, or New York strip steaks) and finely textured grain and is best cooked using fast-cooking methods like roasting, grilling, or sautéeing. With fast twitch muscle, optimal eating conditions are met pretty much as soon as you reach your final serving temperature (say, 145°F for a chicken breast or 125°F for a steak). Extended holding at that temperature can increase tendernessslightly, but you won't see any major changes in texture or flavor.
  • Slow twitch muscle, on the other hand, comprises the continually working muscles in an animal. The shoulders and haunches that keep the animal upright and walking. The tail muscles that keep the flies off. The muscles around the flank that keep the animal breathing. Slow twitch muscle is characterized by robust flavor, but a very tough texture with lots of connective tissue that needs to be cooked for extended periods of time to be broken down. With slow twitch muscle, the tenderness of the finished product is dependent not only on the temperature at which it's cooked, but also the length of time it is cooked for. Beginning around 160°F tough collagen begins to break down into tender, juicy gelatin. The hotter the meat, the faster this breakdown occurs.

So to sum up:With fast twitch muscle, temperature is the most important factor when cooking. With slow twitch, both time and temperature affect the final product.

The Best Temperature to Cook Pork Butt

So if higher temperatures leads to faster breakdown of connective tissue, shouldn't you just blast your pork shoulder at the highest oven temperature it can take without burning the skin?

Not so fast. Temperature has other effects too, namely, drying meat out. I roasted two identical pork shoulders until they were both equally tender. One at 375°F (which took about 3 hours), and second at 250°F (which took about 8 hours). After roasting I calculated the amount of total moisture lost in the meat by adding together the weight of the finished roast plus the fatty drippings in the pan below and subtracting that from the initial weight of the roast.

Turns out that at a higher temperature, a pork shoulder loses about 8% more juices than at a lower temperature due to muscle fibers contracting and squeezing out their contents. Eating the meat from the two roasts confirmed as much, though to be honest, both were pretty crazy juicy and moist.

On the other hand, the high temperature roast showed at least one definite advantage over the low-roast:The skin.

Here is a piece of skin from a pork shoulder cooked at 375°F the whole time:

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (4)

And here is a piece cooked at 250°F:

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (5)

See the difference? Problem is that cooking a great piece of pork skin requires two separate activities.

First, you've got to break down connective tissue. There's a common misconception that animal skin—chicken skin, turkey skin, pork rinds—is made up of fat. This is not true. There certainly is a lot of fat in the skin and directly underneath it (necessary to help warm blooded animals maintain their body temperature), but skin also contains a great deal of water and connective proteins which, just like connective tissues in slow-twitch muscles, must be broken down via long cooking.

On top of that, once the connective tissue has softened sufficiently, moisture needs to be forced out of it, and the remaining proteins need to be heated until they coagulate and stiffen up. It's the combination of these three things—connective tissue breakdown, moisture loss, and firming of proteins—that leads to crisp-but-not-tough skin.

When cooked at 375°F, all three of these things happen at about the same time. By the time the connective tissue has broken down, you've driven off enough moisture from the rind to render it hard and crunchy. In a 250°F oven, on the other hand, connective tissue breaks down for sure, but moisture loss and protein stiffening don't occur to a great enough degree to deliver a crisp finished product. Instead, you end up with skin that's soft and tender, but floppy.

So clearly, once again we should be cooking our pork at a higher temperature, right?

Hold up, there's one more thing to consider.

Getting the Crispiest Skin

We all know whatsurface areais, right? Take a look once again at a close up of the crisp skin from the pork cooked at 375°F:

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (6)

See how despite a few wrinkles here and there, it's all relatively smooth? Well, smooth objects have relativelylow surface areagiven a particular volume, while winkled, bubbled, crinkly, curvy objects have a relativelyhigh surface areagiven the same internal volume. And when it comes to texture, more surface area = more crunch.

It's the same principle behind, say, scratching up the surface of potatoes before roasting them to get them extra crisp (more onultra crispy roast potatoes here), or packing your burger extra loose to give it a crisper exterior and more browning (check out that effect in my recipe forUltra Crispy Burgers.

When roasting at 375°F, because the dehydrating and protein-setting is taking place at the same time that the connective tissue is breaking down, there's never really a stage when the skin is relatively structure-free. It goes from being firm through connective tissue directly to being firm through dehydration.

On the other hand, after 8 hours in a 250°F oven, the pig skin has very little structural integrity—there's really very little holding it together and it closely resembles a bundle of tiny balloons just waiting to be filled.

How do you fill those balloons?Let heat do the work for you.

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (7)

By taking that slow-cooked pork, and banging it into a preheated 500°F oven, both air and steam trapped within the skin will rapidly expand, causing millions of tiny bubbles to form and causing the skin to rapidly expand.And here's the key:As the bubbles expand, they stretch their walls out thinner and thinner. Eventually, they are so thin that the heat from the oven is able to quite rapidly cause them to set into a permanent shape that won't collapse even when the pork is pulled out of the oven.

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (8)

In this sense, pig skin is very much like a loaf of bread: high temperature causes gas expansion which then gets trapped in a protein matrix that firms up in the heat of the oven to create a crunchy, crisp crust.

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (9)

Have you ever seen anything so beautiful?

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (10)

Personally, I generally prefer my meat relatively unadorned—good meat, salt, and pepper is all I need. Pork shoulder, on the other hand, is great at taking flavor. You can feel free to rub the meat and skin with your favorite spice blend or dry rub before roasting it, or—my method of choice since it keeps your options open—keep it plain for roasting and instead season the shredded picked tender meat before serving.

I like to bring the thing whole to the table and allow diners to pick and pull at it with their fingers, offering a few sauces to work with on the side. Try sweet and spicynuoc cham, Chinese stylechar sui, Cubanmojo, a sweetMemphis-style barbecue sauce, or a bright Argentinianchimichurri. Or better yet, this is a pork party, so throw out a whole selection.

Shredded roasted pork shoulder is excellent on its own, even better in sandwiches with a bit of cole slaw, or makes an excellent addition to soups, stews, taco fillings, Cuban sandwiches, empanada fillings, arepa stuffings, hash, omelettes, etc.

It's nearly as impossible to mess up slow-cooked pork shoulder as it is to bring the sucker to the table without eating half the skin yourself before it arrives.

December 2011

Recipe Details

Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder

Prep15 mins

Cook8 hrs 20 mins

Active10 mins

Resting Time30 mins

Total9 hrs 5 mins

Serves8to 12 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 whole bone-in, skin-on pork shoulder, 8 to 12 pounds total

  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

Directions

  1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and preheat oven to 250°F (121°C).

  2. Line a rimmed baking sheet with heavy duty aluminum foil (see notes) and set a wire rack inside it. Place a piece of parchment paper on top of the wire rack. Season pork on all sides liberally with salt and pepper and place on parchment paper. Transfer to oven and roast until knife or fork inserted into side shows very little resistance when twisted, about 8 hours total.

    Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (11)

  3. Remove pork from oven and tent with foil. Let rest at room temperature for at least 15 minutes and up to 2 hours. Increase oven to 500°F and allow to preheat. Return pork to the oven and roast until skin is blistered and puffed, rotating every 5 minutes, about 20 minutes total. Remove from oven, tent with foil and allow to rest an additional 15 minutes. Serve by picking in the kitchen or just bring it to the table and let guests pick meat and crispy skin themselves, dipping into sauce of their choice on the side (see note).

    Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (12)

Special Equipment

Rimmed baking sheet, wire rack

Notes

To make a pan sauce, skip the aluminum foil when roasting; when the pork's finished, drain off and discard the excess fat and deglaze the rimmed baking sheet by heating it over a single burner and adding two cups of white wine, chicken stock, or a combination of both. Scrape up browned bits, transfer to a small saucepan, season to taste, and whisk in two tablespoons butter off heat.

Read More

  • The Food Lab Redux: 7 Pork Dishes for the Holidays
  • Roast a Pork Shoulder and Feast For Days
  • Pork Shoulder
  • Dairy-free Mains
  • Gluten-free Mains
  • Roasted Pork
  • Pork Mains
Ultra-Crispy Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How to make pork skin crispy when roasting? ›

Bake at 450F for 30-45 minutes or until the skin has puffed up. If any edges are starting to burn, place a small piece of foil to cover to get the skin as evenly crisp as possible. If needed, place pork under broiler for a few minutes to speed up the blistering process (watch carefully to ensure skin does not burn).

How long does it take to cook pork shoulder at 250 in oven? ›

I roasted two identical pork shoulders until they were both equally tender. One at 375°F (which took about 3 hours), and second at 250°F (which took about 8 hours).

How long does it take to cook a pork shoulder at 200 degrees? ›

Preheat the oven to 200 to 250 degrees F. Place the pork shoulder on a sheet pan fitted with a rack. Roast the pork until the internal temperature of the roast registers 200 degrees F, 8 to 9 hours, or overnight.

What is the best temperature to cook a pork shoulder? ›

Pre-heat oven to 250F (121C). Roast pork shoulder for pulled pork in the oven for approximately 8-12 HOURS. Or until internal temperature reaches 190F (91C), rested to a final 195F (94C).

How do you get pork crackling extra crispy? ›

Preheat oven to 230°C, 210°C fan or Gas Mark 8. Put the joint in a roasting tin on the top shelf for 20 minutes. This sudden blast of heat is the key to crispy crackling. Reduce the temperature to 180-190°C, 160-170°C fan or Gas Mark 4-5 and follow the cooking times below to ensure the joint is cooked through.

How to get a good crust on pork? ›

Giving the pork a little time to warm up will ensure a nice crust on the outside, with a tender center. (Well, if you follow the next few pieces of advice, that is...) For chops, we like to get our pan screaming hot...then take it down to medium. That first blast of heat helps get a good golden crust.

Does pork shoulder get more tender the longer it cooks? ›

Unlike the more lean tenderloin and chops, pork shoulder is an incredibly forgiving cut of meat. It becomes more tender as it cooks and benefits from a lengthy cook time, so even if it stays on the heat a few minutes too long, you won't suddenly end up with something dry or rubbery.

How long do you cook pork shoulder per kg? ›

Cooking instructions
WeightInitial crispOven time
1kg30 mins1 hour
1.5kg30 mins1.5 hours
2kg30 mins2 hours
2. 5kg30 mins2.5 hours
1 more row

Can you overcook pork shoulder in the oven? ›

It's not easy, but yes, you can overcook pork shoulder! It becomes tough, chewy and dry when it's cooked for too long or at too high a temperature.

What is the lowest temp to slow cook pork? ›

We recommend a temperature of 195-200 °F / 90-93 °C for tender, juicy pork which pulls apart easily. * Note: Gently place the stock pot in the center of the Proofer base and avoid sliding your pot to prevent scratching the aluminum surface on the base of the Proofer.

What's the lowest temperature you can cook pork? ›

Cooking Whole Cuts of Pork: USDA has lowered the recommended safe cooking temperature for whole cuts of pork from 160 ºF to 145 ºF with the addition of a three-minute rest time.

Can you slow cook pork at 200 degrees? ›

Cooking a pork roast at 200°F (93°C) is considered a very low and slow cooking method, which can result in exceptionally tender and flavorful meat. The exact cooking time will depend on the size and thickness of the pork roast, but you can estimate roughly 6-8 hours of cooking time for a typical 3-4 pound roast.

What temperature is pork shoulder done in Celsius? ›

Check for doneness.

The ideal temperature for sliced pork shoulder is 88°C. For pulled pork, the ideal temperature is 96°C. The high internal temperature allows collagen to break down, making the meat very tender.

What temperature is pork cooked at Celsius? ›

Cook all raw pork steaks, chops, and roasts to a minimum internal temperature of 145°F (62.8 °C) as measured with a food thermometer before removing meat from the heat source. For safety and quality, allow meat to rest for at least three minutes before carving or consuming.

How long does it take to cook 1kg of pork? ›

Turn the oven to 180°C and cook for 30-35 minutes per kg, depending on how well you like your roast cooked. Once cooked, let the roast rest for 10 minutes before slicing. One of the most important things when cooking a pork roast, is to dry off the rind as much as possible before you start cooking.

Why is my roast pork skin not crispy? ›

Insufficient heat will make it hard for the skin to get really crisp. Make sure to take the pork out of the fridge 30 minutes before you cook it so that the meat reaches room temperature. A high starting temperature (240C/220C fan/gas 9 in this recipe) is essential for crisping up the pork.

Why is my pork skin hard when roasting? ›

If the heat is too high, the skin will get rock hard, along with the meat. That's why we use medium heat when we fry. And don't forget to dry the pork as much as possible first. The drier it is, the crispier the skin.

Why is my roast pork skin so hard? ›

The heat at which you cook pork cracklins can also cause them to become hard. If the temperature is not high enough, the skin won't crack properly, resulting in a rubbery texture. Make sure to cook pork skin in oil that has a smoke point of 400 degrees.

Does baking powder make pork skin crispy? ›

Whole pork shoulders or pork belly roasts can be magical when treated right. Poke the skin with a needle or knife without breaking through the meat too far. Then dust with salt and baking powder and allow to dry overnight. The next day, when you cook, the skin will puff and crisp up in ways you only imagined before.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Allyn Kozey

Last Updated:

Views: 6173

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (63 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Allyn Kozey

Birthday: 1993-12-21

Address: Suite 454 40343 Larson Union, Port Melia, TX 16164

Phone: +2456904400762

Job: Investor Administrator

Hobby: Sketching, Puzzles, Pet, Mountaineering, Skydiving, Dowsing, Sports

Introduction: My name is Allyn Kozey, I am a outstanding, colorful, adventurous, encouraging, zealous, tender, helpful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.