Slicing Pork Tenderloin

19 Comments

  1. Thank you, thank you!! You have finally found a way to produce a 2-page printer-friendly recipe without ink-gobbling pictures. I have used this recipe many times over and it even works in the oven — no smoke, of course. Although it is easier to control the temperature in an oven, I still prefer to cook in my Big Green Egg with just a small amount of pecan wood. The pork loin flavor is so tasty but delicate that you can easily ruin it by over-smoking.

    1. The Big Green Egg has much less variation than a thermostat in a conventional gas oven, not sure about electric range….probably worse?

      Once you have your cooking temp stabilized in the Egg the temp is quite stable throughout the cool as long as there’s ample charcoal for the cook.

      Very rare to vary over 5 degrees in the Egg; most gas ovens have variance of 10-15 degrees in hi/lo temp.

      Don’t believe me, check it with a remote ThermoWorks Chef, Smoke or the other…..you’ll see a vast difference!

  2. I have a gas grill but can use pellets for smoke. Would this loin be over the hot or unlit side of the grill?
    Thanks Robert

    1. Robert,

      That’d work great! if you want, you can even sear it a little at the end, providing you pull it a little early.

    2. Smoke it indirectly, on the cold side. As mentioned you can reverse sear it at the end of the cookout you must acount for this in terms of temperature though. 🌡

  3. Thanks for the information this is very helpful. Can you recommend a good pork loin rub? I have tried a few but have not had great luck and the hard part is getting any kind of flavor into the meat. Would injector or a brine help?

    1. Brian,

      An injection or brine would help, yes. The flavor of a rub doesn’t really get deep into a loin, it’s true. For that reason, a more aggressively flavored rub is a good idea. I like something spicy, but something with a little smoke in the rub already is a good idea, too.

    2. I do salt pepper galic on mine but also us a glaze that is 50% vinegar and 50% sugar. I love molasses/ Sheri vinegar personally. I baste throught the cook.

  4. I pull mine around 130°F, let cool until temperature starts dropping (sometimes this takes a while due to carryover), then sear it on all sides to 140°F internal.

  5. I made this over the weekend and was happily surprised. I had read in the past that the loin would be too lean to smoke, but it was shockingly moist even without brining! Bought a whole loin at $1.39/lb at costco. Shared with neighbors and family and still have leftovers for less than ten bucks!

    Thanks for posting this!

  6. Smoked Pork Loin is the perfect roast to make for the entire family or when a group of friends come over for a backyard BBQ scen..Also thanks for share such good information.

  7. There is a recipe for beef where the meat warms up on the counter for three hours before starting – no mention of that for this pork.

  8. Don’t let it sit out of the fridge for more than an hour or you will risk the salmonella, and that’s a bad deal! Been there, done that.

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