19 Comments

  1. As with most of your recipes, this looks really good. The one big problem for me and a lot of other people these days is the majority of your (or anyone else’s) BBQed, smoked or grilled meat recipes, all call for tons of sugar of one sort or another. I (and a lot of others in this age of diabesity) can’t have sugar of any sort, no white, brown, turbinado or other forms of cane or beet sugar. No molasses, no honey or maple syrup. No sugar period. I’m not even allowed to eat fruit other than a few berries.

    Can you convert your recipes to no sugar versions and put a section for us on your website, please?

    1. Keven,
      I understand that this a big problem for a lot of people. In this particular case, you can leave the sugar out of the rub and just braise them in some butter, then skip the sugary glaze. Just toss them on the smoker gain to “dry out” the butter. Believe me, they’re still plenty tasty!

  2. I couldn’t get pork belly, so I tried chopping “country-style ribs” into cubes instead…I don’t recommend anyone else try it! ????

    1. Mark,
      Oh no! I’m sorry it didn’t go well. Those “country-style ribs” have neither the fat nor the connective tissue to stand up to this cooking process. But thanks for taking a hit for the rest of us! I hope you can find some pork belly and give it a try. If you do, let us know how you liked it!

  3. Is it ok to stack two or three cooling racks at different heights in one smoker? Don’t understand why you say you used two smokers for two racks.

  4. What is the desired temp after the first 2 hours of smoking? One important thing I’ve learned on this site is temperature not time controls the process. The smoking range of 225 to 275, the size of the cut meat, and the meat temperature all play a role in the success of the smoke.
    Thank you.

    1. Brian,
      Thank you for your comment! The temp stays the same for the rest of the cook, but now the pieces are covered and smothered in sugar and butter. You are right that temp matters, so get those ends to 203°F and dig in!

  5. So is the butter/sugar that’s left in the first pan (with lots of pork fat certainly there too) – is that all just discarded? I’m not sure what I’d do with it anyways, but want to be sure I understand correctly.

  6. i make my own bacon and have lots of ends and pieces left over so i thaught i would try making burnt ends with them. i will let you know how this works works out.!

    thanks for the recipe!

  7. I had a slab of pork belly with a ton of straight fat on one side. Is it possible to substitute the butter in the braise with this extra pork belly fat?

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