Anonymous wrote:This is tiny. Does it have fat / skin on it? Here is a really good recipe but you’ll need to adjust time since your piece is smaller. I do this for the bone in pork shoulder that is about 4-5 lbs with skin and it turns out amazing.
https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/aaron-mccargo-jr/simple-roasted-pork-shoulder-recipe-1923881
Anonymous wrote:Pancit. Just don't leave it out on the counter for a day before serving it.
Anonymous wrote:2.5lb? It's likely a tenderloin, not a pork shoulder. Whoever sold it to you doesn't know meat cuts.
Anonymous wrote:First are you sure that it’s a pork shoulder and not a pork loin roast? Seems small for a pork shoulder.
Assuming it’s shoulder, if you want to go Italian I’ve always enjoyed this recipe: https://lidiasitaly.com/recipes/roast-pork-shoulder-roast-vegetable-sauce/
For just two pounds I’d probably cut the high-temp roasting by 30% and get ready to pull it out earlier (use a meat thermometer).
This isn’t “fall off the bone” shoulder as written, but if you left it in for another hour at lower temp you’d get to that stage. The key for “fall off the bone” shoulder (like pulled pork) is to roast at low temperature (225-250F) long enough to get the internal temperature up to 220F, where the collagen starts to fall apart. For a full 5-8 lb shoulder that can take up to 8 hours of roasting, but for yours I’d guess just a few hours.
Anonymous wrote:First are you sure that it’s a pork shoulder and not a pork loin roast? Seems small for a pork shoulder.
Assuming it’s shoulder, if you want to go Italian I’ve always enjoyed this recipe: https://lidiasitaly.com/recipes/roast-pork-shoulder-roast-vegetable-sauce/
For just two pounds I’d probably cut the high-temp roasting by 30% and get ready to pull it out earlier (use a meat thermometer).
This isn’t “fall off the bone” shoulder as written, but if you left it in for another hour at lower temp you’d get to that stage. The key for “fall off the bone” shoulder (like pulled pork) is to roast at low temperature (225-250F) long enough to get the internal temperature up to 220F, where the collagen starts to fall apart. For a full 5-8 lb shoulder that can take up to 8 hours of roasting, but for yours I’d guess just a few hours.
Anonymous wrote:Bought a small pork roast this week and need a good easy recipe and cooking instructions please. I have a slow cooker and this seems a bit small to be cooking in one........I would prefer oven, but just want it to turn out tender and flavorful and well cooked most important. Thank you in advance if you've cooked one before and enjoyed it.
All the recipes I see are for 6 lbs.....There are only 2 of us! Smile