Hello everybody, I hope you’re having an amazing day today. Today, I will show you a way to make a special dish, roast whole pig. One of my favorites. For mine, I’m gonna make it a little bit unique. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
When picking a pig, make sure you communicate to your butcher that you want a whole pig for a pig roast. You will also need to tell them how big of a pig you want, and when you want to pick it up. Whole pig on a spit with two whole chickens inside!
Roast whole Pig is one of the most popular of recent trending meals in the world. It is easy, it is quick, it tastes yummy. It is appreciated by millions daily. They’re fine and they look wonderful. Roast whole Pig is something that I have loved my whole life.
To begin with this recipe, we have to first prepare a few components. You can cook roast whole pig using 16 ingredients and 26 steps. Here is how you can achieve it.
The ingredients needed to make Roast whole Pig:
- Make ready Brine
- Get 4 gallon Cold Water
- Prepare 3 gallon Apple Juice
- Prepare 6 lb Brown Sugar
- Prepare 4 1/2 cup Morton's Kosher Salt
- Take 48 clove Garlic
- Prepare 48 Whole Cloves
- Make ready 18 Whole Bay Leaves
- Get 12 oz Ginger
- Get 9 Oranges
- Get 4 tbsp Whole Peppercorn
- Make ready 1 large Bag of Ice
- Get Pig
- Prepare 45 lb Dressed Pig
- Make ready 1 La Caja China
- Get 44 lb Charcoal
Celebrate Independence Day (and a successful hog hunt) with a backyard feast. If there's ever a time to go whole hog—in every sense—it's Uncle Sam's. Oftentimes the pig is roasted in a wood-burning oven or outdoors, making it impractical for a lot of us. Don't have time to commit to roasting a whole suckling pig?
Steps to make Roast whole Pig:
- Two days prior to roasting the pig, make the brine. To start the brine, first dissolve the sugar and salt in a large stock pot with approximately half of the water (~2 gallons) over low heat.
- Stir the pot frequently to prevent forming a lump of salt and sugar on the bottom of the pot.
- While the pot simmers, peel the garlic and crush it. Also thinly slice the ginger. - - Note: Save yourself a lot of time and effort by buying a bag of whole peeled garlic cloves from a Sam's Club or Costco.
- Once the salt and sugar has completely dissolved, turn off the heat.
- While the water is still hot add the garlic, ginger, whole cloves, bay leaves, and peppercorns.
- Allow the mixture to cool to room temperature.
- Using a hammer and a thick spine knife or sharp hatchet, split the backbone of the pig from inside the cavity.
- Place the pig in a large watertight cooler.
- Add the apple juice, the remaining water, ice, and the salt/sugar water mix to the cooler.
- Cut the oranges into quarters. Squeeze the juice of these pieces into the cooler. Throw the orange peel into the cooler with the pig.
- Ensure the pig is completely covered with brine. Check the pig daily to ensure there is still plenty of ice in the cooler and that the pig remains below 38 F.
- After 48 hours of brining, empty the cooler of brine. Remove the pig and thoroughly rinse with cold water. - - Note: Using a garden hose make this much easier.
- Place the pig in the wire rack that comes with La Caja China.
- Ensure the pig is dry as can be and place it in the Caja China belly side up.
- Put the lid on the box. Add approximately 12 pounds of charcoal to the top of the box and light. - - Note: Using match ready charcoal for the initial charcoal load is a great time saver. Making two mounds near the ends of the box makes it easier to light and gets the heat going near the thickest portions of the pig.
- After the charcoal is completely lit, use a metal rake to spread the coals out evenly.
- After 1 hour, add 8 more pounds of charcoal. Repeat this 2 times, once at the 2 hour mark and again at 3 hours of cooking time.
- After 4 hours of cooking, remove the top grate and shake off the ash. Set it on the installed stand. - - CAUTION: The coal pan and the pig are both very hot. Use a friend and thick BBQ gloves to do this.
- Now remove the lid and dump the hot ashes into a metal bucket.
- Put the lid back on and place the coal tray back in place on the lid. Now you can remove both and set them on the installed stand to give yourself access to the pig.
- Flip the pig. Simple pick up one end of the pig and flip end over end.
- Using a sharp knife score the skin with large X's between the grating wire.
- Put the lid with charcoal pan back on and add 8 pounds of fresh charcoal to the hot charcoal.
- After 30 minutes, check the pig. If the skin is crispy, remove from the box. Otherwise, replace the lid and cook for another 10 minutes and check again. Repeat this as many times as is necessary to get the desired crispness. - - Note: If your pig is done, but you are not ready to serve, simply pick up the lid and rotated 45 to 90 degrees and set it back down on the box. You now have a large warming drawer.
- Remove the pig from box. Remove the holding grate. Slice and serve. I like to separate the skin into separate pans and cut the meat into bite size chunks. - - CAUTION: The pig meat will be very hot.
- Serve with Hawaiian rolls, corn tortillas, or lettuce wraps. Add BBQ, hoisin, or tomatillo sauce and enjoy.
A pig roast or hog roast is an event or gathering which involves the barbecuing of a whole pig. Pig roasts, under a variety of names, are a common traditional celebration event in many places including the Philippines, Puerto Rico and Cuba. A whole roast suckling pig is quite special. No other feast food of the holiday season cooks so easily, and presents so majestically. With its mahogany, crisp skin and its sticky-tender meat, people thrill to.
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