Originally posted by nickelmore
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Pulled Pork Attempt, keep it or pitch it?
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In God I trust- All others pay cash...Check out the Mad Hunky and products at https://madhunkymeats.com or https://www.facebook.com/MadHunkyMeats
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Originally posted by DDave View PostI'd say you would have been fine if you didn't inject. If you hadn't injected only the outer 1/4" needed to get up to 135° in four hours. But since you did inject, that changes what the recommendations say. Recommendations for whole intact muscle no longer apply.
If I was going to inject I would have set the initial temp to 250°. But then I always start them at 240°.
127° after 5 hours on an injected butt? I'd toss it and either not inject or crank up the heat next weekend..
But it's your call. Not for me to decide. Just telling you what I would do based on my understanding of the recommendations.
I agree with DDave, because this is what we were taught.
However there is always discussion about the "140° in no longer than 4 hours" thing (if you Inject or Probe before the outside is at 140° for some length of time.)
I always wait until 3 hours in to play it safe, and I don't inject.
Some would just eat some themself before allowing others to eat it. Some would toss it.
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For the record, I'm just going by what bbally told us all those years ago in the Food Safety discussion thread and remaining cautious.
Yes I realize the risk of pushing bacteria into the meat and something happening is small. But I don't know for a fact that that didn't or is not going to happen. Therefore I don't feel comfortable telling someone "You're fine. Go ahead and eat it" when I don't in fact know that.
I guess I could with some confidence say "You're probably fine and the probability that you will turn into a hydro powered stool rocket is low" but I would rather give them the pertinent info and let them decide for themselves.CUHS Metal Shop Reverse Flow
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"All welcome, take what ya need, share what ya know. " -- Richtee, 12/2/2010
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Originally posted by Richtee View PostTechnically..this is correct. Altho chances are smaller with pork/beef, you MAY have inadvertently poked bacteria into the meat with the injection process.
While I cannot seem to find info on it, here’s a “poster” recommending 155° for any injected meats. Take note prime rib/rare roast peoples.
https://www.fns.usda.gov/sites/defau...ulesPoster.pdf
This has been well hashed out in the sous vide threads, but if the internal temp was in the 134* range after 4 hours, it is well within the guidelines published for sous vide cooking (even if a little bacteria or two was pushed inside the time of exposure to the lower temp had done the job). If you go by the USDA poster, every piece of meat I've put in my sous vide bath was a lethal time bomb looking for a victim.Dave
I love coming home. My back porch smells just like a BBQ joint.....
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Yes..there are those guides. But also, remember that SV is a precise temp controlled environment... and more predictable than a pit..hell a damned oven possibly. Soo - fudge factor present.In God I trust- All others pay cash...Check out the Mad Hunky and products at https://madhunkymeats.com or https://www.facebook.com/MadHunkyMeats
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Originally posted by curious aardvark View PostSeems like a waste to me :-(
But each to their own I guess :-)
Life lessons aren't always free. This one cost me $12 and some time.
11#s of meat is a good bit, looks even larger after shredding. Plan was to eat some, freeze some and give some away. I can't in good conscience give away food that could cause sickness. Lessons leaned
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Originally posted by HawgHeaven View PostI don't inject for two reasons. One is the bacteria thing, and the other is it is a pain in the arse to clean the needles. And I don't like poking holes in my meat.sigpic
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Originally posted by SMOKE FREAK View PostAll the SV shit aside
I doubt there was a problem...Betting all of us have been in that same situation and didn't know it
I don't inject because I'm too lazy...That and I don't think butts need injecting Quote that one
That is interesting. Before the wired thermometers and such how did one know?
I will only be rubbing the butt and not injecting it next time. I also won't be getting such a big butt, after pulling it, it definitely was a butt load of meat
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Originally posted by strength_and_power View PostThat is interesting. Before the wired thermometers and such how did one know?
I will only be rubbing the butt and not injecting it next time. I also won't be getting such a big butt, after pulling it, it definitely was a butt load of meat
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Basically they learned to cook without all the new equipment before they started using the new stuff. Just because a piece of meat has cooked for 4 hours or the IT is 195°, doesn't mean the meat is done(poultry excepted for temp). Learn to do a bend test or toothpick poke for ribs, probe tender test for brisket or butts.
Seems like now days people new to smoking think it's all going by a clock or temp gauge to tell if something is done. Then they ask why when it doesn't come out the way they expect it to. The time and temp are just tools to use. Not the end all.
JMHO-YMMVLast edited by BYBBQ; 01-24-2017, 08:35 AM.Jim
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