The first time I tried to make pulled pork, I thought I could just throw it in a slow cooker with some bottled sauce and hope for the best. Big mistake. What I got was soggy, stringy meat drowning in sugar. No bark. No depth. No payoff.
It wasn’t until I studied Gordon Ramsay’s technique—dry brine, low-and-slow roasting, and a barbecue sauce that balances vinegar, molasses, and heat—that I finally got it right. This isn’t about shortcuts. It’s about control.
Here’s how you take a basic pork shoulder and turn it into something that actually earns the plate.
Why This Works (And Where Most Go Wrong)
Most pulled pork fails in two places:
- Lack of seasoning penetration. People just rub the pork and roast it. Ramsay’s dry brine goes in overnight—drawing moisture out, seasoning deeper, and helping you form that bark.
- Wet cooking with no crust. If you drown it in liquid or foil it too early, you kill your crust. Ramsay roasts it uncovered the entire time, fat-side up, with just enough beer-water to keep steam low and steady.
Also—the sauce isn’t an afterthought. It’s sharp, sweet, and acidic. Not some cloying bottle of sugar pretending to be BBQ.
Ingredients That Actually Matter
- Pork Shoulder (4–5 kg, skinless, bone-in, fat cap on): Bone-in holds structure, fat cap bastes the meat. Don’t trim it.
- Brown Sugar + Paprika (for rub): This caramelizes and builds your crust. Sugar is not optional.
- Cumin, Mustard Powder, Oregano: Earthy, bitter aromatics that balance the sweetness.
- Beer (360ml): Use something malty, not hoppy. Think lager or amber—not IPA.
- Molasses + Apple Cider Vinegar (for sauce): Ramsay’s version isn’t shy—this sauce punches back.
I once used a boneless shoulder and trimmed the fat. Never again. Came out dry and bland.
How To Make Gordon Ramsay Pulled Pork
Step 1 – Dry Brine Like You Mean It
Pat the pork dry. Mix the rub. Rub it everywhere. Don’t skip the bottom or under folds. Let it sit, uncovered, in the fridge for 24 hours. This is your bark insurance.
Step 2 – Oven at 110°C / 230°F
Preheat fully. No guesswork. This temp lets fat slowly render and collagen break down without rushing the bark.
Step 3 – Roast Uncovered with Beer + Water
Place pork in a heavy roasting tray, fat side up. Pour beer and water into the pan—about an inch deep total. No covering. No foil. Roast for 12 hours. You’re aiming for 95°C (203°F) internal temp.
Step 4 – Rest and Shred
Pull it out. Let it sit 20 minutes minimum. This redistributes the juices. Then shred with forks or tongs. You’ll feel where the fat cap wants to come off—peel it, or mix it back in if you like richness.
Step 5 – Sauce It Properly
Skim fat from the pan. Add ¾ cup of the juices + 1 cup of your barbecue sauce into the meat. Toss to coat. Don’t drown it.
Step 6 – Serve with More Sauce on the Side
This isn’t fast food. This is “pause-and-watch-someone-take-a-bite” level good.

What Gordon Ramsay Says About Pulled Pork
“The meat should fall apart, but still have texture. Not mush.”
Exactly right. If yours turns to paste, you went too hot or didn’t rest it.
“Let the flavor build from the outside in.”
That’s the dry brine + bark method. You don’t fix underseasoned pork later—it has to start seasoned.
“Use the fat to your advantage.”
The fat cap is there to baste the meat—don’t remove it early.
“Balance your sauce—sweet, sharp, heat.”
His barbecue sauce leans tangy, not sweet. The molasses adds depth, not just sugar.
What I Got Wrong (And How I Fixed It)
- Mistake: Using boneless, lean pork shoulder
Fix: Switched to bone-in with fat cap. Major flavor and moisture difference. - Mistake: Covering the pork in foil
Fix: Left it uncovered. Bark development exploded. - Mistake: Didn’t brine overnight
Fix: Did the full 24-hour dry brine. Seasoning went deep. Worth it. - Mistake: Skipped skimming the pan juices
Fix: Removing the fat layer gives you clean, flavorful liquid gold.
Variations That Actually Hold Up
- Spicy Version: Double the cayenne and add chipotle powder to the rub.
- No Beer? Use beef stock or root beer. Just stay away from wine—it’ll clash.
- No Molasses? Use dark brown sugar + a splash of coffee concentrate to mimic the depth.
Do not use lean pork loin or pre-trimmed cuts. You’ll lose everything that makes this work.
Pro Tips That Change the Game
- Temp control is king. Get a leave-in thermometer—don’t trust the oven dial.
- Rest longer if possible. You can rest the pork under foil for up to an hour. It gets juicier.
- Reheat low and slow. Use a splash of apple juice or broth to rehydrate it.
- Want crispy bits? Toss the shredded pork in a cast iron skillet over medium heat until caramelized.
Storage + Leftover Moves
Store: Airtight container, fridge, 3 days max.
Freeze: Portion and freeze in zip bags with a splash of pan juice. Up to 3 months.
Reheat: In a covered skillet with a bit of water or pan juices over low heat.
Leftover Moves:
- Pulled pork tacos with pickled onion
- BBQ pork mac and cheese
- Pork + fried egg breakfast rolls
FAQs
Q: Can I use a slow cooker instead?
A: Technically yes—but you won’t get the bark or depth. Oven wins.
Q: Can I make this ahead?
A: Yes. It tastes better the next day. Just reheat gently.
Q: What kind of beer should I use?
A: Go with lager, brown ale, or amber. Avoid IPAs.
Q: Is it spicy?
A: Only if you add the Tabasco and cayenne. Easily adjustable.
Q: Can I use bottled BBQ sauce?
A: Not for the base. Gordon’s version balances acid, sweetness, and heat—bottled sauces lean too sweet.
Try More Recipes:
- Gordon Ramsay Chicken Burger Recipe
- Gordon Ramsay Air Fryer Chicken Recipe
- Gordon Ramsay Chicken à la King Recipe
- Gordon Ramsay Tomato Risotto Recipe
Gordon Ramsay Pulled Pork Recipe
Course: DinnerCuisine: AmericanDifficulty: Easy12
servings20
minutes12
hours260
kcalSlow-roasted pulled pork with bold seasoning, tender texture, and a tangy homemade barbecue sauce that actually tastes balanced.
Ingredients
- Pork:
4–5 kg bone-in pork shoulder, fat cap on
360ml beer
240ml water
- Rub:
90g brown sugar
30g paprika
15g each: garlic powder, onion powder, mustard powder
10g cumin
5g oregano
2g cayenne (optional)
30g kosher salt
5g black pepper
- Barbecue Sauce:
720g ketchup
240ml water
240ml apple cider vinegar
110g brown sugar
45g molasses
20ml Worcestershire
10ml Tabasco (optional)
15g mustard powder
10g salt
5g black pepper
Directions
- Dry brine pork with rub, uncovered, 24h in fridge.
- Preheat oven to 110°C (230°F).
- Place pork fat-side up in roasting pan. Add beer + water.
- Roast uncovered for 12h or until 95°C (203°F) internal temp.
- Rest 20 mins. Shred. Remove fat cap if desired.
- Add ¾ cup pan juices + 1 cup BBQ sauce. Toss to coat.
- Serve with extra sauce on side.
Notes
- Temp control is king. Get a leave-in thermometer—don’t trust the oven dial.
- Rest longer if possible. You can rest the pork under foil for up to an hour. It gets juicier.
- Reheat low and slow. Use a splash of apple juice or broth to rehydrate it.
- Want crispy bits? Toss the shredded pork in a cast iron skillet over medium heat until caramelized.

I’m Ava Taylor. I’m A Self-taught Home Cook Who Loves Gordon Ramsay Recipes. I Try Every Dish In My Small Apartment Kitchen And Tweak It Until It Works. I Write Clear Steps With Simple Words So Anyone Can Follow. I Share Honest Wins, Mistakes, And Quick Tips To Help You Cook With Confidence.
