Has anyone here cooked a whole pig? I saw this image in a Traeger email a few weeks ago and thought it would be interesting to give it a try. The write up is here.
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The Traeger site says to use a 65 lb pig, so I ordered a 60-lber from a local butcher. When I picked it up, the dressed-out pig came to 68 lbs. I won't go into the fun time it was keeping it cold from Friday afternoon until the Sunday cook. That sucker was way too big for my normal-sized coolers, though.
The pig was way big for the smoker, much bigger than the one pictured above. I couldn't fit it into the smoker upright. I had to cut off the feet and put it on its side.
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I put it on the smoker at 7am, at 250*, per the instructions on the Traeger site. A little after 12 noon, I pushed the smoker temp to 350*. The instructions say to cook until the temp of the shoulder is 205*, but I never got it that high. It barely hit 195* by 6pm, when a few neighbors came over to share the experiment. I kept checking temps in the shoulder, ribs, and butt, but none of them got to 195 until the end. I would have liked to flip it over onto its other side mid-cook, but it was too hot and I didn't dare to risk dumping it on the ground. I should have at least probed both sides for temps.
20160814_175719_800.jpg
Once I had a couple neighbors there to help pull it off the smoker, it was obvious that the grill-side was way overcooked. It looked like Harvey Dent from The Black Knight. Oh, well, we pulled all the meat off it, and it was pretty tasty, but a little dry. I must have got at least 1 1/2 quarts of drippings in the waste bucket. It was really strange to see a bunch of that coming out of the ear.
20160814_180503_800.jpg
The Traeger site said this thing could feed 100 people. No way. We would have been lucky to feed 30. I get much more meat from the 2-pack pork shoulders from Costco. And they cook up way better.
So some questions for anyone that's made it this far.
I looked all over the web to see how to prep the beast, but found absolutely nothing. Sure, there were instructions about sawing down the backbone to flay it open, but a Traeger isn't wide enough for that. Would it have helped to at least saw through the breastbone to try to open it a bit? I couldn't find anything on the topic. I think I'd have had better luck if I could cook it upright, but that would have required a much smaller pig, or at least one without such a deep ribcage. Any suggestions?
The Traeger instructions say to heat to 205*. That is obviously bogus. 195 was plenty, but still left me with a lot of overcooked meat in the thinner sections. Any suggestions for temps and how to protect the thinner sections?
I don't think I'm going to try this again. It's a novelty I had to try once, but pork shoulders are the way to go.
0716_Whole_Hog_RE_HE_M_800.jpg
The Traeger site says to use a 65 lb pig, so I ordered a 60-lber from a local butcher. When I picked it up, the dressed-out pig came to 68 lbs. I won't go into the fun time it was keeping it cold from Friday afternoon until the Sunday cook. That sucker was way too big for my normal-sized coolers, though.
The pig was way big for the smoker, much bigger than the one pictured above. I couldn't fit it into the smoker upright. I had to cut off the feet and put it on its side.
20160814_074729_800.jpg
I put it on the smoker at 7am, at 250*, per the instructions on the Traeger site. A little after 12 noon, I pushed the smoker temp to 350*. The instructions say to cook until the temp of the shoulder is 205*, but I never got it that high. It barely hit 195* by 6pm, when a few neighbors came over to share the experiment. I kept checking temps in the shoulder, ribs, and butt, but none of them got to 195 until the end. I would have liked to flip it over onto its other side mid-cook, but it was too hot and I didn't dare to risk dumping it on the ground. I should have at least probed both sides for temps.
20160814_175719_800.jpg
Once I had a couple neighbors there to help pull it off the smoker, it was obvious that the grill-side was way overcooked. It looked like Harvey Dent from The Black Knight. Oh, well, we pulled all the meat off it, and it was pretty tasty, but a little dry. I must have got at least 1 1/2 quarts of drippings in the waste bucket. It was really strange to see a bunch of that coming out of the ear.
20160814_180503_800.jpg
The Traeger site said this thing could feed 100 people. No way. We would have been lucky to feed 30. I get much more meat from the 2-pack pork shoulders from Costco. And they cook up way better.
So some questions for anyone that's made it this far.
I looked all over the web to see how to prep the beast, but found absolutely nothing. Sure, there were instructions about sawing down the backbone to flay it open, but a Traeger isn't wide enough for that. Would it have helped to at least saw through the breastbone to try to open it a bit? I couldn't find anything on the topic. I think I'd have had better luck if I could cook it upright, but that would have required a much smaller pig, or at least one without such a deep ribcage. Any suggestions?
The Traeger instructions say to heat to 205*. That is obviously bogus. 195 was plenty, but still left me with a lot of overcooked meat in the thinner sections. Any suggestions for temps and how to protect the thinner sections?
I don't think I'm going to try this again. It's a novelty I had to try once, but pork shoulders are the way to go.


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