Eastern NC Whole Hog
This is where American BBQ began. Eastern North Carolina's whole hog tradition is the purest expression of Southern BBQ - a whole pig slow-cooked over wood coals, then chopped and dressed with nothing but vinegar, salt, and red pepper. No tomato. No sugar. Just smoke, pork, and tang.
Equipment Needed
Instructions
Source the hog: Order a whole dressed hog from a local farmer or butcher, 80-120 lbs. The hog should be split down the spine (butterflied) with the head on. Have it delivered cold.
Make the vinegar sauce: Combine apple cider vinegar, salt, red pepper flakes, black pepper, and cayenne (if using) in a large container. Stir until salt dissolves. This sauce needs no cooking - it's ready to use.
Prep the hog: Season the entire hog inside and out with salt and black pepper. Let it come to room temperature for 1-2 hours while you build the fire.
Build the fire: In a traditional pit, burn hardwood down to coals in a separate burn barrel. Traditional Eastern NC uses oak or hickory. You'll need to maintain a bed of coals throughout the cook.
Position the hog: Place the hog skin-side UP on the pit grate, spread open. In Eastern NC tradition, the hog cooks skin-side up so the meat bastes in its own juices.
Manage the fire: Maintain pit temperature of 225-250°F by shoveling coals from the burn barrel. Place more coals under the shoulders and hams (thicker parts), less under the middle. This takes constant attention for 12-18 hours.
Mop the hog: Every 2-3 hours, mop the meat side with the vinegar mopping liquid. This keeps the meat moist and adds flavor. Close the pit after each mopping.
Check for doneness: After 12-18 hours, the hog is done when internal temperature in the shoulders and hams reaches 195-205°F and the meat pulls easily from the bone. The skin should be deeply browned and crispy.
Chop the hog: Pull the hog from the pit and let rest 20 minutes. Using cleavers, chop ALL the meat together - shoulders, hams, belly, loins - mixing dark and light meat. This is essential to Eastern NC style.
Dress and serve: Add the vinegar sauce to the chopped meat - enough to moisten but not drown. Serve on cheap white bread or cornbread, with coleslaw on top. That's the Eastern NC way.
💡 Pro Tips & Variations
- No tomato. Ever. Eastern NC sauce is ONLY vinegar, salt, and pepper. Adding tomato or sugar makes it Lexington (Piedmont) style - a BBQ war you don't want to start.
- The skin question: The crispy skin ("Mr. Brown") is the prize. Some chop it into the meat, others serve it separately. Both are correct.
- Fire management is everything: This is an all-night affair. You need a team working in shifts to maintain the coals.
- Pork shoulder substitute: Can't do a whole hog? Two bone-in pork shoulders cooked the same way will give you the authentic flavor in a smaller package.
- Traditional accompaniments: Eastern NC BBQ is served with vinegar slaw (no mayo), Brunswick stew, hush puppies, and sweet tea.
- The pit: Traditional pits are cinder block construction with expanded metal grates. Commercial smokers work but lack the romance.