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  • gjbingham
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    Thanks for the recommendations on the Lamb SJ et al. I'm going to defrost it and go for it.

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  • Richie
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    We use pork shoulders/pork picnic here in TX. I have done 2 so far. Put them in the turkey roaster pan about midnight after I cooked pizzas. Let the top brown for about 30 minutes, covered with foil, passed out from too much tequila. When I pulled it out at 7 the next morning, it was so tender and juicy, so I pushed it back in, went to work, and pulled it back out at 4 that afternoon. We ate pulled pork for 3 days, then I was sick of it so I gave it to the neighbors.

    So easy and very reasonable on price.

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  • SpringJim
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    Originally posted by gjbingham View Post
    What the heck do you do with that much meat???

    I can't justify cooking a leg of lamb because I know half will never be eaten.
    With the pork I'd use it for bbq pork sandwiches. (but it would be after a party) And cold lamb sandwiches are great! slice it up and freeze if it's a lot.

    George, you might want to try a lamb shoulder...better flavor, less meat. One shoulder serves two normal people. Great in a slow oven after pizzas.

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  • dmun
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    I'm an absolute convert to roasts in the WFO. it's self cleaning. If i don't want gravy (I don't do pork gravy) I just put a couple of sheets of foil overlapping on the oven floor and cook the roast on a rack. No clean up except for the roasting rack! If there is a bunch of grease splatters on your oven, they burn away with the next firing.

    Also, your house doesn't smell of that hot grease smell for the next day or two.

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  • nissanneill
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    Hey, we go through a large leg of lamb almost every sunday evening with the family here, but generakky cooked in the domestic electric oven. Still having problems convincing the other half that a wood fired oven can cook other things than pizzas.
    If any is left, it is used with salads and sangas (sandwiches) for lunch the folowing week for both of us. Cold roast lamb, cheese and chutney sangas are great.

    Neill

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  • gjbingham
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    What the heck do you do with that much meat???

    I can't justify cooking a leg of lamb because I know half will never be eaten.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrianShaw
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    Elizabeth. All of what you think is true. Personally, I like the slow-roasted Boston "butt" shoulder (especially with the bone in) better than pork leg - more fat = more flavor.

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  • egalecki
    replied
    Re: hind quarter?

    I'm not positive, but I think a pork butt (Boston butt) is actually a shoulder cut. I've cut them up and they don't have "hind quarter" type bones in them at all, more like shoulder bones. Maybe what's sometimes called a "fresh ham" is more like the hind quarter. They aren't smoked, just a whole rear leg.

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  • SpringJim
    started a topic hind quarter?

    hind quarter?

    I talked with another oven owner who does a hind quarter (leg) of a hog....I think he said about 20-25 pounds.....says it does really well in the WFO....low and slow....anyone done one? Or is that just a pork butt by another name?
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