Pulled Pork

Ree Drummond’s fan-favorite recipe for oven-baked, slow cooked pulled pork makes juicy shredded pork for sandwiches, sliders, nachos, tacos and more.

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Pulled Pork
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Level: Easy
Total: 10 hr 20 min (includes marinating time)
Active: 20 min
Yield: 16 servings

Pulled pork is a staple at barbecue joints, backyard BBQs and game-day parties, where the succulent shredded meat stars on meat-and-three plates, in sandwiches and atop nachos. Ree Drummond loves making her family-favorite pulled pork recipe, especially since it’s a budget-friendly way to feed a crowd. And making barbecue restaurant-worthy pulled pork at home is easier than you think. With Ree Drummond’s oven-baked, slow cooked pulled pork recipe, you’ll learn the best cut of pork to use, how to make a flavorful barbecue rub, the secret ingredient that adds loads of flavor, how to evenly shred the pork and her smart shortcut for making a tasty barbecue sauce.

How to Make Pulled Pork Like a Pro

Choose your cut of pork. Ree uses a pork butt roast (also known as pork shoulder roast) which is a relatively inexpensive cut of meat that has a lot of connective tissue and marbling, making it well suited to low-and-slow cooking applications like barbecuing and oven-roasting.

Make a flavorful barbecue rub for the pork. Ree makes a flavorful, well-balanced spice rub with brown sugar, chili powder, paprika, garlic powder, salt, black pepper and cayenne, then rubs the mixture all over the pork butt.

Marinate the pork overnight. Wrap the pork in plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight to ensure the pork is well-flavored and seasoned throughout.

Cook the pork low and slow over aromatics in a foil-covered pan. Ree adds halved onions to a disposable roasting pan (easy clean-up!) and places the pork directly on top. She covers the pan with foil, which helps to ensure even cooking and keeps the pork moist. Roast the pork until fork-tender and falling apart, about 7 hours at 350 degrees F.

Make a flavorful barbecue sauce from the pan drippings. Ree drains the fat off from the cooking liquid, then adds hot water to deglaze the pan and scrape up the pan drippings. Then she adds a bottle of good quality barbecue sauce and cooks it with the cooking liquid to make a flavorful, tangy barbecue sauce.

Shred the pork and don’t rush the process. Remove the cap of fat from the pork and use two forks to break up the pork and completely shred it by pulling the fibers (not tearing them). As Ree says, it’s important to have patience as it’s a process that can’t be rushed.

Add onions and barbecue sauce for extra flavor. The tender, fall-apart cooked onions are sliced and added to the pork for a burst of extra flavor, and the shredded pork and onions are tossed in the tangy-savory barbecue sauce until well-coated.

Best Pork for BBQ Pulled Pork: Pork Butt vs Pork Shoulder

The best cuts of meat for pulled pork come from the shoulder of the pig because it’s got a lot of marbling and connective tissue, ensuring fall-apart-tender, juicy and moist shredded pork. Pork butt and pork shoulder are also relatively inexpensive, making it a great budget-friendly option for feeding a crowd. Ree’s pulled pork recipe calls for either pork shoulder or pork butt roast, but because pork butt has more connective tissue, fat and marbling, it has a richer pork flavor. For more information, check out our primer Pork Butt vs. Pork Shoulder: What’s the Difference?

Dry Rubs for Pulled Pork

Dry rubs for pulled pork should have a well-balanced flavor profile of savory, sweet and spicy. To make her pulled pork spice rub, Ree uses brown sugar for a warming sweetness and to help tenderize the meat, garlic powder and paprika for savory, earthy depth, chili powder and cayenne pepper for heat and salt and pepper. It all adds up to a savory, lightly sweet barbecue spice rub with a touch of heat.

Sides to Serve with Pulled Pork

Serve pulled pork with mac and cheese, coleslaw, potato salad, baked beans, cornbread, potato rolls or slider rolls. Try making some of Ree’s best barbecue pulled pork sides, including her fan-favorite Macaroni and Cheese, Classic Coleslaw, Perfect Potato Salad and Quick and Easy Baked Beans.

Recipes Using Leftover Pulled Pork

Some leftover ideas for pulled pork include pulled pork nachos, sliders, tacos, tostadas, soup, sandwiches and salads. Try using leftovers to make some of Ree’s best pulled pork recipes, including Spicy Pulled Pork Sliders, Sheet Pan Nachos or Pulled Pork with Roasted Brussels Sprouts and Cheese Grits. For a hearty helping of comfort food, use leftover barbecue pulled pork to make Pulled Pork Enchilada Casserole, Cajun Pulled Pork and Grits or Kansas City-Style Pulled Pork Chili.

Recipe courtesy of Ree Drummond

Pulled Pork

  • Level: Easy
  • Total: 10 hr 20 min (includes marinating time)
  • Active: 20 min
  • Yield: 16 servings

Ingredients

Directions

  1. Stir together the brown sugar, chili, paprika, garlic powder, salt, black pepper and cayenne in a small bowl. Rub the mixture all over the pork shoulder. Wrap the pork in plastic wrap and refrigerate for several hours or preferably overnight.
  2. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees F.
  3. Place the pork in a large pot on a bed of the onion halves. Roast until fork-tender and falling apart, about 7 hours. Remove the pork from the pot and set it on a cutting board. Slice some of the onion.
  4. Place the pot on the stove over medium-high heat and add 1/2 to 1 cup of hot water. Scrape the pan to loosen up the bits and cook for 5 minutes to reduce. Pour in the barbecue sauce and stir to heat.
  5. Shred the meat with two forks, add the sliced onions to the pork and then toss in the barbecue sauce until it's coated to your liking! Serve on hamburger rolls.
rated 4.5 of 5 stars

261 Reviews

Reeka
ReekaApril 16, 2024
rated 4 of 5 stars
I've made this several times and it's excellent. I've made this with a 6-8lb pork butt. Does anyone know how long to cook this per lb? I have a 17 lb one and I'm not sure how long to cook it for. Anyone?
loieboero
loieboeroJanuary 22, 2024
rated 4 of 5 stars
I made this pulled pork exactly as written and it turned out great with one exception. It burned so badly on the bottom of my roasting pan, I could not use any of the drippings. I cooked a 5.5 lb pork shoulder, applied the rub (including brown sugar), placed it in a 300 degree oven and tightly covered it with foil. After just 5 hours I checked it, and it was fully cooked but the bottom burned to the pan and the drippings were useless. I will try this recipe again and (1) will add about 1 cup of water to the bottom of the pan and check it often add more water as needed, and (2) will add brown sugar during the last 2 hours or so of cooking. This should eliminate the burning and I expect the pork to be even better with the pan drippings.
vickiescrase123
vickiescrase123September 7, 2024
Thank you so much for making a note of this. I wondered about that. Mine is 3.92 lbs so I am going to check much sooner. Appreciate the notes!
Tony M.
Tony M.January 13, 2024
rated 5 of 5 stars
I e made this several times. It’s the guys favorite! Great recipe & you can’t screw it ip. So easy & delicious!
Elizabeth
ElizabethNovember 27, 2023
never put a crock pot insert on an open flame. did it once. the entire pot cracked into a million pieces and all that liquid went bye bye into the stove. I was cleaning for days. It was a Crockpot the brand.
monicasauve
monicasauveSeptember 14, 2023
rated 1 of 5 stars
This by far;- wasn't worth it...no flavor and gummy.Ree has alot better recipes than this one..
freifrei723
freifrei723August 22, 2023
rated 5 of 5 stars
I made this for my son's baptism and it turned out PERFECT. There is no messing up to be had! Instead of the oven, I put in my slow cooker over night on the bed of onions. I did 8.5 lbs at about 1 hour per lb and shredded the onions right into the mix too. Definitely keeping this recipe!
helenbagley1
helenbagley1July 31, 2023
rated 5 of 5 stars
This recipe is fabulous, so flavourful and moist. We served it at a family reunion on the weekend, for 165 people, turned out fantastic. We used 50 lbs of pork shoulder , 8 bottles of bbq sauce. Everyone raved about it, some asked for the recipe! I definitely recommend putting the rub on the night before, gives it more flavour, yummy
Brenda
BrendaAugust 30, 2023
We’re they boneless or bone-in shoulders?
Dennis A.
Dennis A.January 27, 2024
Bone in gives better flavor also
Anonymous
AnonymousJuly 24, 2023
rated 4 of 5 stars
The pork was very tender and pulled apart easily. I used only a 3 lb shoulder/butt, since there are only two of us. I think next time I prepare this dish, I will not put the pork in the sauce, but serve it on the side. We do not eat buns/bread, so it was much too soggy in the sauce. Easy preparation and delicious rub.
Susan
SusanJuly 17, 2023
rated 5 of 5 stars
Thank you to the Anonymous reviewer who said the size of the pork butt was 6.5 lbs, I had been wondering why my 2.5 lb one cooked so quickly.Also thanks to the many who mentioned the need to cover the pot, mine came out even better when I covered it while cooking (I did not watch the video). And I may have already reviewed this at 5 stars as I have made it many times and do not feel the need to look for any other pulled pork recipes since this one is great. Thanks, Ree!
Kathy
KathyJuly 17, 2023
What does it mean 1 T chili? Chili powder? Chili flakes?
Virg F.
Virg F.July 17, 2023
My guess would be powder
Elizabeth
ElizabethNovember 27, 2023
1/2 powder, half flakes. my mom used to put flakes in it, it just gave it something special.
Stacey S.
Stacey S.December 14, 2023
Power. If you watch the episode it's chili powder. 😀
lmsearls
lmsearlsMarch 22, 2024
the video is attached and it's chili powder