Tag: Pulled Pork

Love Your Leftovers: Pulled Pork Banh Mi

Use leftover pulled pork to make this banh mi from the new cookbook Love Your Leftovers. Get the recipe – and my take on the book – below!

Shawn and I are terrible when it comes to eating leftovers. I try to bring them to work with me for lunch, but after a day or two I get tired of eating the same exact thing. Unless I made something amazing, Shawn generally won’t even touch them (he says he’ll bring them for lunch, but he never seems to remember.)

That’s why I was so excited to hear about fellow food blogger Nick Evans’ new book, Love Your Leftovers. The premise is simple, but brilliant: cook a big batch of something, then add a little more work to it each night to completely transform it so it doesn’t seem like leftovers. It might seem like common sense, but it’s not something I ever think to do on my own.

The “mother” recipes – things like roast chicken, salmon, and black beans – are flavorful enough to eat on their own the first night, but really shine when you use them to create the spinoff recipes.

I decided to put Nick’s crockpot pulled pork to the test. We ate it three ways (in carnitas tacos, as a topping for BBQ pulled pork pizza, and in Banh Mi sandwiches) over the course of a week and definitely didn’t feel like we were eating leftovers. I even ate some of the taco filling/toppings over rice and beans for lunch one day. I could have happily kept going for another night or two, but we ran out of pork. I’d call that a success!

Unfortunately, I set myself up for a little bit of disappointment since I didn’t understand the concept 100% before getting so excited about the book. To be clear, this isn’t a “cook once eat twice” sort of deal. Although some of the main recipes would be fine on their own as dinner, others are components like lentils, tomato sauce, or baked potatoes. You’ll definitely have to make something to go along with them.

You’ll also need to put a little effort into the transformations – even with the head start you’ve given yourself, the spinoff recipes take 30-40 minutes to make. Still, 40 minutes for something like chicken and dumplings that tastes like it’s cooked all day is pretty good. Just know what you’re getting into.

The recipes that I tried were all really solid and I loved the little touches like quick pickled onions for the tacos and the addition of smoked gouda on the pizza (I usually go for cheddar on BBQ pizza, but smoked gouda is definitely the way to go!)

Planning my week out around the pork made choosing and preparing weeknight meals so much easier. And since so many of the other ingredients I needed overlapped between these recipes, it cut down even more on the amount of food we wasted for the week!

Love Your Leftovers: Pulled Pork Banh Mi

This recipe was very slightly adapted from Love Your Leftovers – partially due to personal preference (I don’t eat mayo) and partially due to the variety of ingredients available at my local supermarket.

Author: Lauren Keating

Serves: 2

Ingredients

  • 1 baguette (14-16 inches long)
  • 1 teaspoon olive oil
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • 1½ cups leftover pulled pork
  • 1 tablespoon fish sauce
  • ¼ cup water
  • 1 pinch black pepper
  • ⅓ cup low fat plain Greek yogurt
  • 1 tablespoon Sriracha chili sauce
  • ½ cucumber, thinly sliced
  • 1 carrot, grated
  • 2 radishes, thinly sliced
  • 1 jalapeno, thinly sliced
  • Pickled banana peppers
  • Fresh cilantro

Preparation

  1. Heat the oven to 400ºF.
  2. Cut the baguette in half, then split it down the center. Place cut-side up on a baking sheet. Toast in the oven for 5 minutes, or until slightly crispy.
  3. In a medium saucepan, heat the olive oil. Add the garlic and cook 1-2 minutes, or until soft. Add the pulled pork, fish sauce, water, and pepper. Bring to a simmer; cook until the liquid is absorbed, 4-5 minutes.
  4. In a small bowl, mix the yogurt and Sriracha. Spread both sides of the bread with yogurt sauce. Top the bottom slice with pork and vegetables; top with a second piece of bread.

3.2.2310

Disclosure: I received a review copy of Love Your Leftovers. This post contains Amazon affiliate links (if you make a purchase after clicking my link, I’ll earn a small commission.) 

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Top Ten Recipes – 2013 Edition

It’s the end of an eventful year here at  101 Cooking For Two. The main non-food highlights are continued growth with now over 6 million page views but the biggie is the move to WordPress. This have been monopolizing  most of my blogging time for months ( and for several more months).

So here we go. Somewhat influenced by popularity but really just my choices for the top ten of the year.  I eliminated several repeat recipes from previous years which would have made the cut ( The Best Grilled Pork Tenderloin – Memphis Style and Ultra Simple Crock Pot White Chicken Chili ).  I have looked at this for a week and keep changing but here is the final list in reverse order

#10

Old Fashion Scalloped Potatoes
A great old fashion taste in a classic recipe.

#9

Grilled Blackened Tilapia
This started at #4 originally and fell but there is no way it was falling off the top ten. A great spicy grilled fish that is also good for you. So easy and fast.

#8

Crock Pot Baked Ziti
I’m not sure how this is here but I really REALLY liked it. Crock pot easy really good Italian.

#7

Healthier Low Fat Carrot Cake
The only thing not great about most carrot cake is the fat. So this is a great carrot cake.

#6

Oven Pulled Pork from Pork Butt
I know I should grill my pork butt but this is so good and easy. No playing with grill temperatures and great taste and moisture.

#5

Old Fashion Cheesy Potato Casserole
An old family favorite for years. Just wonderful and goes with anything for company or everyday.

#4

How to Grill a T-bone or Porterhouse Steak – A Tutorial
Let’s get our steaks done right. A never fail method that we just did again tonight.

#3

Parmesan Garlic Baked Potatoes
I called this “your new favorite side dish” and it will be.

#2

Easy Chocolate Chip Cheesecake
A great home-made cheese cake that will impress anyone that tastes it. OK this should be number one but see the explanation below.

 #1

Uncooked Macaroni Crock Pot Mac and Cheese
I will call this the “Peoples Choice” I would have made it top ten but this recipe exploded out of the gate and has kept going. You get creamy Mac and Cheese with none of the unknown nasty chemicals.

That’s it for now.

Have a great 2014.

DrDan

Updated
January 2 2014

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Oven Pulled Pork from Pork Butt

Low and slow. Yep that is how you do it. Great tasting moist pulled pork with only a few minutes of active cooking time. EASY, EASY, EASY…

Those of you who need to scream, please do so now. I know, I know it is in an OVEN recipe. At least it is not crock pot…

Pork butt is make for the grill/smoker but sometimes you just can’t do it. I had the butt, I had my grill recipe but we were having gusting winds. 25-30 mph and up to 60 mph just a few miles away. Just not outdoor cooking weather.

I had a good idea that this was going to happen to me and had done a some research. I was so confused… there was aluminum foil covering most recipes, there was onions and various veggies. There was oven temps of 225 and 250 but also a lot of 350 recommendations. There were finish temps of 170 on some. And pork being cut with knifes. IT IS PULLED PORK!!!!! …… ARGGGGG.

I needed a plan:
1) So most smoker and grillers will agree on low and slow. You do not turn up the temp. You need time for the connective tissues and fats to melt into their goodness. 250 degrees is a good target temp for a grill and is so easy in an oven.
2) In an oven smoke was not an option but some smoke taste was needed. Enter liquid smoke. I would just give it a good rub of liquid smoke prior to the rub. Get a good quality liquid smoke. It should have water and smoke only. NO CHEMICALS.
3) Otherwise I would treat it like it was on the grill. Use the same rub and cook to 190 plus.

An excellent plan and the house smelled great all day long.

Rating:

Ok, a lower 5 to leave room for grilled pulled pork as a higher 5. But really so good without the fuss. I will be doing this again. Over and over again.

Notes: Others seem to like to say 1 hr per pound. Doesn’t work for me. I seem to always be at least 2 hours per pound plus a little. Maybe I’m over cooking but mine is fall off the bone, easy to shred moist and tender. This was just under 4 pounds and took 9 1/2 hours. Do not remove early, or you will be sorry. Give the guests that are waiting some  alcohol and they won’t care. The rest before the shred could be as short as 30 minutes but longer is better. It will stay warm with my method for about 3 hours.

You will need a rub of your choice and some Liquid Smoke.

If using my rub, mix 1/2 cup dark brown sugar, 3 T kosher salt, 1 T chili powder, 1 t garlic powder, 1 t onion powder and 1 t pepper.

Place a 4 pound (give or take a little) bone in Boston Butt on a large piece of plastic wrap. Rub with about 2 T of liquid smoke.

Use the entire one cup of rub and coat the meat. That is a very heavy coat.

Wrap the meat with plastic wrap. You may need a second piece. Refrigerate for at least 1 hour but over night if you can.

When ready to cook, prep a large rimmed baking sheet with foil and a rack. Give it a heavy spray of PAM.

Place meat on rack and place in a 250 degree oven (not convection). I did not bother to preheat. I went with fat cap down.

Bake until internal temp of  190 plus (200 is good). About 9-10 hours. This will vary some with the thickness of the meat and the oven. You have some flex time in the next step to get your timing right.

Remove from oven directly onto a large sheet of heavy duty foil. Wrap tight with the foil then wrap with several towels.

Place wrapped meat in a small cooler if available and rest for 1-2 hours until needed.

Shred with forks. It will fall apart.

Oven Pulled Pork from Pork Butt

By
Dan Mikesell
November 2 2013

Outrageously good. Easy oven pulled pork with only a few minutes of work. EASY, EASY, EASY…

Ingredients

  • Pork Butt aka Pork Shoulder 4-5 pounds
  • Rub of your choice
  • 2 T good quality liquid smoke
  • My Rub

  • 1/2 cup dark brown sugar
  • 3 T kosher salt
  • 1 T chili powder
  • 1 t garlic powder
  • 1 t onion powder
  • 1 t pepper

Instructions

  1. If using my rub, mix 1/2 cup dark brown sugar, 3 T kosher salt, 1 T chili powder, 1 t garlic powder, 1 t onion powder and 1 t pepper.
  2. Place a 4-5 pound (give or take a little) bone in Boston Butt on a large piece of plastic wrap. Rub with about 2 T of liquid smoke.
  3. Use the entire one cup of rub and coat the meat. That is a very heavy coat.
  4. Wrap the meat with plastic wrap. You may need a second piece. Refrigerate for at least 1 hour but over night if you can.
  5. When ready to cook, prep a large rimmed baking sheet with foil and a rack. Give it a heavy spray of PAM.
  6. Place meat on rack and place in a 250 degree oven (not convection). I did not bother to preheat. I went with fat cap down.
  7. Bake until internal temp of  190 plus. About 9-10 hours. This will vary some with the thickness of the meat and the oven. You have some flex time in the next step to get your timing right.
  8. Remove from oven directly onto a large sheet of heavy duty foil. Wrap tight with the foil then wrap with several towels.
  9. Place wrapped meat in a small cooler if available and rest for 1-2 hours until needed.
  10. Shred with forks. It will fall apart.
  11. Serve and enjoy…

Yield: 8 servings
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cooking Time: 9 hours
Total Time: 9 hours and 10 minutes

Updated
November 2 2013
Dan Mikesell

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