Food & Drink

Up Your Backyard Barbecue Game with Southern-Style Pork Steaks

Get a pitmaster’s recipe for a lesser-known cut that’s winning over ’cue fans

pork steaks

Photo: Elliott Moss


A few weeks ago, a Reddit user asked Daniel Vaughn, Texas Monthly’s barbecue editor, if he thinks it’s time to expand the Texas canon beyond the “holy trinity” of ribs, brisket, and sausage, to reflect barbecue’s diversification. “If I could choose one cut over them all,” Vaughn wrote, “I would go with pork steaks.”

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He isn’t the only Southerner evangelizing the pork steak, a cut most often associated with St. Louis, where it’s been a backyard barbecue staple since the 1950s.

To be clear, the pork steak isn’t new to the South. It’s been on plates in Monroe County, Kentucky, for generations, and it’s the single-serving version of one of the region’s barbecue classics—pork shoulder. “It’s just Boston butt cut into slices,” says Elliott Moss, the veteran pitmaster behind Elliott’s BBQ Lounge, which he opened this past spring in Florence, South Carolina. The pork steak is still heavily marbled and richly flavored, and for home cooks, it’s a more manageable endeavor than tackling a whole hunk of shoulder.

A South Carolina native, Moss tried his first pork steak at Snow’s in Lexington, Texas, where it’s one of ninety-year-old pitmaster Tootsie Tomanetz’s specialties. The format was novel, but the concept was familiar. Moss grew up eating his parents’ “country-style ribs,” which also typically come from the shoulder but are divided into rib-like strips instead of steaks. “My mom would marinate them in soy and Worcestershire sauce, and then my dad would slow-grill them over coals for a few hours, until they had a kind of steak-like texture,” Moss says. “He would glaze them with a teriyaki sauce as they were finishing. They were really good.”

Moss has added pork steaks to the menu at Elliott’s, where he seasons them more simply, with salt, pepper, and a vinegar-pepper mop sauce, like the Carolina-style whole hog he’s been known for since he ran the now-closed Buxton Hall Barbecue in Asheville. But the texture is inspired by his childhood memories. After a slow cook over smoldering embers, his finished steaks are tender but not quite pulled-pork tender. “When I hear the word steak,” he says, “I’m picturing something I have to cut with a knife. I don’t want people saying, Oh, he’s calling it a steak, but it doesn’t really eat like a steak.” For fall-apart texture, you have to take a pork shoulder to at least 200°F. Moss pulls his steaks off the smoker earlier, at about 170°F. 

Pork steak with sides and sauce.
Photo: Elliott Moss
Pork steak with sides and sauce from Elliott’s BBQ Lounge.

That distinction is helping his vinegar-and-pepper-mopped steaks stand out in a region that already has an appetite for slow-cooked pork. “We’re selling out of them pretty often,” he says. And if you can’t make it to Elliott’s anytime soon, you can bring his pork steak gospel to your next cookout. Adapted from his recipe at the restaurant, this home-cook-friendly version takes some time, but it’s mostly hands-off, and just about any backyard grill will get the job done. Moss plates the steaks simply, the way he cooks them—with sauce, sides, and a steak knife.


Southern-Style Pork Steaks

Yield: 2 to 4 servings

Ingredients

    • 1 tbsp. Diamond Crystal kosher salt (for table salt, use half as much)

    • 2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

    • 1 tsp. garlic powder

    • 2 bone-in pork shoulder steaks, also called blade steaks, 1¼-inch thick (20 to 24 oz. each)

    • Vinegar-pepper mop sauce (recipe follows)

    • Your favorite barbecue sauce, for serving

Preparation

  1. In a small bowl, combine the salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Season both sides of the pork steaks evenly, then let them rest at room temperature for 30 minutes.

  2. While the steaks rest, prepare a charcoal grill for indirect cooking: Spread a thin, even layer of unlit briquettes over about one-third of the bottom grate, leaving the rest empty. Light a quarter chimney’s worth of briquettes. When the top coals glow red (about 15 to 20 minutes), pour the chimney briquettes over the unlit coals to create a steady source of indirect heat.

  3. Place the cooking grate on the grill and close the lid, positioning the top vent over the side without the coals. Start with the bottom vent half open and the top vent three-quarters open.

  4. Let the temperature rise gradually. As it approaches 200°F, begin adjusting the vents to slow the climb. Aim for a cooking temperature around 250°F. If the grill runs hot (above 275°F), narrow the bottom vent slightly. If it’s too cool, open the vents slightly. If you need a little more heat, light another ¼ chimney of charcoal and add a few glowing coals. Allow time for the temperature to adjust before adding more.

  5. When the grill temperature has stabilized around 250°F, place the pork steaks on the cool side, opposite the coals. If you have a leave-in thermometer, use it to monitor the meat’s temperature.

  6. Optional: For extra smoke, place a small chunk of dry hardwood (oak, hickory, or apple) on the hot coals just after adding the steaks, then close the grill immediately so the wood smolders.

  7. After about 1½ hours, open the lid, flip the steaks, and baste them lightly with the mop sauce (recipe follows). Continue cooking with the lid closed, basting every 30 minutes or so. (Open the lid as infrequently and briefly as possible to minimize heat loss.)

  8. Cook until the internal temperature reaches 170°F, about 3 to 4 hours total. The steaks should be tender enough to slice but not falling apart.

  9. Enjoy right away or wrap tightly in foil and hold in a 150°F oven for up to 2 hours. (Moss holds his steaks for about an hour.) Serve with your favorite barbecue sauce.

  10. Adapted from Elliott Moss, Elliott’s BBQ Lounge, Florence, South Carolina


Elliott’s Vinegar-Pepper Mop Sauce

Yield: about 1 quart

Ingredients

    • 1 quart apple cider vinegar

    • ¼ cup light brown sugar

    • ¼ cup granulated sugar

    • 2 tbsp. ground red pepper (see note)

    • 1 tbsp. freshly ground black pepper

    • ½ tsp. crushed red pepper

    • ½ lemon

Preparation

  1. Combine all ingredients in a medium saucepan. Bring to a boil over high heat, then turn heat down to medium-low and simmer for 20 minutes. Remove lemon and let the sauce cool to room temperature. Store in an airtight container. It will keep in the refrigerator for several months.

  2. Note: Moss prefers Sauer’s Ground Red Pepper, a blend of dried chiles, rather than 100 percent cayenne. Cayenne will work as a substitute, but expect a slightly sharper, hotter result. This is a thin glaze, so the difference will be subtle.


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