Pork Steaks came about from butchers having to take cuts of meat from there suppliers that were not popular around here like the pork butt and cutting it into steaks so it would sell. Best way i do them is to get them thick cut from the butcher about 1inch. Rub the3m with a pork rub then smoke them over low heat.
I grew up in St. Louis and I have to say that I'm probably one of the few people who can't stand pork steaks. I'm not sure how you make pork fat MORE greasy, but the pork steak seems to hold the answer. But to each his/her own. Not sure how I feel about my city being known for meat that comes from the hind end of a pig!
I grew up in St. Louis and I have to say that I'm probably one of the few people who can't stand pork steaks. I'm not sure how you make pork fat MORE greasy, but the pork steak seems to hold the answer. But to each his/her own. Not sure how I feel about my city being known for meat that comes from the hind end of a pig!
They don't come from the butt of the pig, that would be ham.
pork butt is actually the shoulder. Its the same piece of meat u would use for shredded pork.
Wiki as always has some info. I think my gf's mom generally goes to the butcher shop and asks for Shoulder Roast Steaks and they cut her exactly a pork steak. fwiw
I've adapted my recipe from a Cook's country recipe that tries to replicate local styles.
Here are my steps
1) Salt and pepper the steaks
2) Cook over hot coals for a couple minutes per side to char a bit
3) In a disposal aluminum pan mix bbq sauce and a homebrew beer in a ration of 1:1 until I have enough sauce to cover the steaks
4) Add steaks to the sauce and cover with foil
5) Flip every 30 minutes (Cook for about 2 hours until tender)
6) Once tender, remove from the juice and put on the grill to brown (about 30 seconds per side)
7) Take off the heat and serve
8) Put sauce in a bowl to serve as a topping. It normally reduces enough in two hours of cooking to be a decent sauce without any changes.
Depending on who I cook for I change the spices used and the sauce used. I think traditionally people recommend Maul's local sauce, but I've used many different bbq sauces.