I was inspired by, "Wonderful pulled pork", posted by okie smokie, Aug 19/'18, in the Traeger section, so I tried a version of it... No molasses, instead I used DARK brown sugar* (highest molasses content)..Here is how it went:
Meat - 8+LB shoulder, bone in thin fat cap.
BRINE - Of all the shoulders I have done, none were brined. They have been good to very good, IMO... The brine ratio is 1/2LB each, sugar* and salt to 1 Gal. water, well dissolved. I used pickling salt. I was able to cover the shoulder using 5 cups of brine..Soaked 12 HRS, removed and patted dry then added the rub ~ 1HR prior to going onto the pit.
RUB - Memphis Dust. Recipe online.
Meat Placement on the Pit - On a rack, fat cap down, in a pan. No liquids added.
Cook Temp - Set 275º. The grate temp averaged just under 260º.
Cook Time - Exactly 14 HRS
Done Temp - 198º. Probed like soft butter - everywhere.
Wrapped in double foil and into a cooler (NO ICE) for 1 1/2HRS.
Pulled and sauced using a home brew bourbon sauce.
How was it? My best to date. Moist beyond belief, and had a slightly distinctive positive new taste that is new to me. Not salty at in any way... I always sample during the pulling operation prior to saucing, so my evaluations are comparable.
This is a sample of one, and may not hold true for future cooks. I believe brining was the difference and plan on going this route in the future. The cost and effort is minimal..
Thanks okie!