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Smoked Shoulder is the basis of many a New England Boiled Dinner, producing moist, tender meat which is less salty than ham. It makes a great dinner and great leftovers (scalloped potatoes with ham, ham Sandwiches, ham and potato hash) And the salty flavorful broth can form the basis of more delicious meals such a split pea, black bean, or navy bean soup. Start by covering the shoulder with cold water.You may soak it all night, change the water, and start the cooking, but I skip the soaking. I bring the water to a slow and steady simmer, make sure there are no papers or greasy combustibles nearby, and simmer the shoulder all night while I sleep or all day while I am at work. The slow low simmer is what you want so the water will not boil away and the shoulder stays covered. What I do next is chill it so that the broth jells and the fat forms a layer on top that can be pulled together with a fork and discarded. My Mom used that white fat in cornbread or biscuits, but we know better now(even though they were delicious). A couple hours before serving I heat the meat up just a bit, pull it out, and by that time you should be able to take large whole muscles off the bone and scrape off the fat between them. There is also a large brown skin underlaid with fat that should be pulled off and discarded. Now you have some large chunks of meat which can later be pulled out of the pot and sliced or cut into serving sized pieces. This meat is now deliciously tender, and pink to red in color. You can stop here if all you want is meat. For a complete boiled dinner, keep reading. IMPORTANT!!!Pour off half the salty broth and dilute with water. If you are thrifty you can save the pored-off broth for bean or pea soup stock but it will also need diluting. Put the large chunks of meat (unsliced) back into the pot and bring to a simmer. While it is heating, get together: Some peeled, halved carrots or half a bag of baby carrots) Some nice clean scrubbed small red or yellow or white waxy potatoes (Cut bigger ones into halves or thirds) Two or three young rutabagas, peeled and cut into chunks A couple-three onions peeled and quartered Some nice fresh cabbage cut into wedges (core removed) About every 10-15 minutes add a vegetable in this order: 1. rutabagas 2. carrots 3. onions and potatoes 4. cabbage wedges. When everything is tender, fish it out onto a platter and slice some of the pork pieces. Serve in soup plates with some of the broth, some butter for mashing into the vegied, and some crusty bread, Sweet-hot grainy mustard and also horseradish sauce are great condiments. Everything should be sweet and edible. Some of the pork will have a brown color and a texture on the outside, as it is hung in cheesecloth bags during smoking; they are fine to eat and are not skin or anything but you may cut those edges off inf you dislike the texture. For me, this is true comfort food; with six kids in the family we probably had it once a month through late Fall to Early spring, and it is still quite economical (and more delicious) compared to ham. I made it today for some West Coast friends who were extremely impressed with how good it was and how many more delicious meals will be had. Try it; it's mostlty simmering and not so much prep or pot-watching at all!

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17y ago

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